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JOHN ALLEN 



Rougn Rider 
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Rough Rider 
Poems 



-By- 



JOHN ALLEN 




CHARLES W. BANCROFT CO. 

CHICAGO 



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Copyright 19)1 
B, 

JOHN ALLEN 



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Contenta 



DAVY CROCKET'S RIDE - - 13-24 

OSCEOLA . - _ 25.43 

THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL - - 45-61 

RAMONA - - _ ^3-72 

MOANEE - - - _ 73_88 

THE OREGONIAN - - 89-106 

THE CLIMBER - - - 107-137 

THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE - 139-153 

THE AIRSHIP - . . 155-156 

THE STRONGEST FORT - - - 157 

YULE - - . - 158-159 

DECEMBER DAYS - - - 160-161 

MIDWINTER - - _ 162-163 

RETROSPECTION - - 164-165 

THE SEASONS - - - 166-171 

THE STEAMBOAT - - - 172 

GOOD-BYE SWEETHEART - - 173-174 

EASTER-TIDE - - - 175-176 

I MISS THEE - - - 177 

IN WINTER - - - 178-179 



DAVY CROCKETS RIDE 



Say, Stranger, now ain't it a zvhile between drinks f 
Ye see, 'bout old Thunder I've so many kinks 
I'd set here forever ter tell what he's done; 
There aint any equal ter him, not a one! 



Davy Crocket Riae 

"You sort of admire that small mustang's pints? 

Why, stranger, there's lightnin' in all them rough jints ! 

That's why his name's Thunder. I gave it to him, 

Tho' when I first owned him his name was plain Jim. 

Set by for a minute ; that's Rosebud, my wife — 

Thar' ain't any finer gal 'round, on yer life ; 

Thar' ain't any sweeter in all the wide West, 

I pan out on her, let who will have the rest ! 

You think she's a woman ; I say she's a Saint, 

An Angel of goodness, I'm blest ef she ain't! 

But speakin' of horses. Whoa ! easy now, Thunder. 

Look out ! he might nip ye, and I shouldn't wonder ; 

Ye see, he knows me, but to strangers he's shy. 

Just look at that devil's light in his off eye ! 

'Twas this way : one day at sun up we sped 

Far out on the prairie, red hot over head ; 

There wasn't a cloud in the bright copper sky, 

And water — there wasn't a drop of it nigh, 

Not even a sign of it, look where you might. 

And nothin' but parched, withered sage brush in sight. 

Why even the tongues of the coyotes hung out 



18 DAVY CROCKET'S RIDE. 

A half a yard long as they skulked 'round about. 

I own I was puzzled to know whar to go — 

To know what to do tho' Vm not always so. 

'Well, Thunder,' sez I, 'it's a clear case of skunk.' 

He snorted, as much as to say — 'We'll git hunk !' 

Then just over thar rose a small cloud of dust, 

I couldn't make out what it meant, at the fust, 

But Thunder there pricked up his ears, shook his head. 

And Tnjuns! run fer it!' that's just what he said. 

Right off to our left was a small clump of trees, 

We started fur that ; it was go as you please ; 

But I knew we could hide, if we got there in time, 

And the way Thunder galloped — well, it was sublime ! 

I just let him have that bit all to the good. 

And yelled 'Go it Thunder !' and he understood ! 

The red devils swept down, with one mighty yell. 

I fired at the foremost, his horse reared, he fell! 

A shower of bullets clipped brush all around, 

But on galloped Thunder — kept time to the sound ! 

Still nearer and nearer, to head us they tried, 

Old Thunder kept going, and never once shied 

Until we were safe behind that clump of trees. 

And Thunder — why, that for him wasn't a breeze ! 



DAVY CROCKET'S RIDE. 19 

But this wasn't all, for I caught just a gleam, 
Although miles away, and I knew 'twas a stream, 
And that was the brightest of visions to me, 
A sight much more precious than any could be ! 
Say, Stranger, do you know the awful sensation 
Of thirst, hev ye given it consideration? 
The sk}' like an oven, the sand 'neath yer feet, 
And even the rattle snakes frizzling with heat ; 
Yer tongue lolling out, and yer lips baked and hard, 
Well, say, if yer haven't, yer lucky, old pard. 
As I was just sayin,' he saved me, old Thunder, 
So look at him, tell me now, ain't he a wonder ? 
But that wasn't all, fer we've had other chases 
Which showed Thunder's mettle and elegant paces. 
Just pass the old bottle, it makes me feel dry 
To think of the times we've had, Thunder and I. 
One night when the stars were all twinkling aloft. 
And breezes were hummin' not any too soft, 
We two had been prospectin' nigh the foot hills, 
And hungry enough, well, to give one the chills. 
When all of a sudden the heavens grew clouded 
A snow-storm was risin', the prospect was shrouded 
With big flakes of snow till our sight it was blinded, 



20 DAVY CROCKET'S RIDE. 

We'd soon lost the trail ; but old Thunder ne'er minded. 
He stood still awhile as if thinking about it. 
Then made up his mind that he could do without it 
And find out a path for himself. 

Now 'twas midnight 
The snow kept on falling, and totally hid night ; 
But Thunder, fleet footed just kept up his stride 
And I was so frozen, I scarcely could ride. 
An hour went by, and we no nigher home, 
The desert was white, like an ocean of foam ; 
I heard a low sound, and the old horse looked back 
To see what it was that had followed his track ; 
I knew it was WOLVES, and, my God, what a pack! 
On, faster and faster, they came with a rush ! 
It made my blood curdle to hear in that hush 
Of snow-blinding midnight the horrible howl 
Of hundreds of wolves with their fierce hungry growl ! 
Old Thunder he knew how to spoil their nice game, 
He'd been thar before, and their mettle could tame ; 
I stood in my stirrups, and held tight my breath, 
(To be eaten alive ain't a nice kind of death!) 
As the foremost black speck shown out clear on the white 
Of the snow, I let loose, and ONE stopped in his flight! 



DAVY CROCKET'S RIDE. 21 

Bang ! Bang ! You'd have thought that all hell was to pay, 
And so for a minute I held them at bay. 
To see them black devils, when they'd scented blood, 
Tear, scramble and scratch would hev' done yer heart 

good. 
Old Thunder swept on, didn't lose nary inch"" 
A friend is yer friend when it comes to a pinch ! 
And he was my friend on that terrible night, 
ril never forget it — not by a dern sight ! 
Them wolves put together, stopped havin' their fight, 
We hurried along, and they fast strugglin' after, 
And all the while makin' their horrible laughter, 
Which seemed to say, 'now we'll soon hev' ye dead beat, 
And dollars to doughnuts you both are our meat !' 
But look! at the foot-hills a half mile away 
There twinkles a light ! 'Tis as welcome as day 
To one who despairs thro' a night of disaster ! 
I'm blessed if old Thunder then didn't run faster, 
And up to the door of my cabin he stopped, 
While out of the saddle I instantly dropped 
And led him straight in, when I barred quick the door 
Those daring black devils we'd foiled just once more! 
Say, Stranger, now ain't it a while between drinks? 



22 DAVY CROCKET'S RIDE. 

Ye see, 'bout old Thunder I've so many kinks 

Fd set here forever ter tell what he's done; 

There ain't any equal ter him, not a one ! 

Well, there was a gal, just a rose-bud of June, 

She set my heart singin' to love's sweetest tune, 

Yer never might think it; but 'twas years ago, 

And somehow time changes a feller, ye know. 

But never the HEART — she's my love to this hour, 

And blooms still for me, my dear rose-bud, my flow'r ! 

Another chap liked her, she didn't let on 

Which lover her mind had yet settled upon. 

So somehow that chap said we'd RACE for her hand, 

Whoever should win she would choose — understand? 

Well, he was a tenderfoot, always would brag 

About his fine Morgan-sired thoroughbred nag. 

And I had old Thunder, or rather plain Jim — 

For that was the name was first given to him. 

The race-day came ofif ; there was lots of a crowd, 

The talk and the bettin' was both rather loud. 

A hundred to one was the odds on my nag, 

But that didn't matter, and I didn't care, 

For I saw a face that looked heavenly fair, 

Her eyes seemed to say, T am yours, and you'll win !' 



DAVY CROCKET'S RIDE. 23 

Although to the rest my chance looked rather thin. 
Four miles straight away and return, was the game, 
His horse looked the winner, mine humble and tame. 
We started, the crowd roared, he'll beat him to death, 
But me and old Thunder there just held our breath. 
In racin' ye know, it's a good thing ter wait 
And shout when yer win, this you'll learn soon or late ! 
The FIRST mile he went away far in the lead, 
But I didn't mind that, I knew Thunder's speed, 
Just hung on until we had come to the TWO 
And then just a leetle up nearer I drew. 
The THIRD, 'bout the same, and I saw Thunder wink 
As much as to say, 'We hev' got him, I think!' 
The FOURTH, goin' easy, as usual quite, 
And then came the run home — well that was a sight ! 
The FIFTH, we had crept up still nearer, could see 
That Morgan-sired thoroughbred didn't agree 
With the lashing his rider applied to his flank. 
I knew in a twinkling his courage then sank, 
And old Thunder's hoof-beats — they flew like a dart — 
Kept always repeating, *Oh, we'll break his heart!' 
'Oh, we'll break his heart!' then the SIXTH mile we 
passed. 



24 DAVY CROCKET'S RIDE. 

And up to his saddle, swept Thunder, at last ! 

He hung there as never a nag hung before ! 

Then up to the skies went a yell and a roar, 

As the SEVENTH we passed, half an inch to the fore! 

The thoroughbred rallied, came at us again, 

His rider plied spur, till he bled from each vein, 

But it was nary use, and the string was in sight, 

And Thunder swept on, in his masterly might, 

Won the race in a canter, and just by pure grit, 

And, Stranger, well, that is about all of it! 

Except that I won the gal settin' up there 

And smilin, a pretty rose-bud in her hair, 

Which she took and pinned on my coat right away, 

And she's been my ROSE-BUD since that very day ! 



OSCEOLA 



What nobler monument 
Should be than his zvhose stolen lands 
Divided were by white man's hands? 
Whose kin were severed from his heart, 
Whose wife was sold at Slavery's mart? 
Conquered in the unequal fight 
Where bullets dared the arrows flight, 
He looms, heroic and sublime 
A noble warrior thro' all time! 



Otfceola 

Here, beside the deep blue sea, 

I muse of days no more to be 

Of Life and all its tangled skein, 

Its mingled joy and bitter pain. 

The white sails dot the pearl tipped waves 

That sob and moan as o'er the graves 

Of sailors in eternal sleep 

Down in the caves of ocean deep ! 

So moans my heart beside the sea 

For one brave heart who once to me 
Seemed god-like in his majesty! 

Whose image now before me comes, 

Aye, god-like still ! 

I hear the drums 
Of yonder surf beat on the shore. 

Again I'm with the hearts of yore ! 

My father was a trader brave 

And led me hither as a boy, 

By dark ravine and rocky cave 

And swamp ; and here it was my joy 

To gaze on Osceola's face 



30 OSCEOLA. * 

With every line of manhood's grace 

Written thereon, as on a page! 

Oh, bravery was the heritage 

Of this great Chief, e'en then my friend, 

And true and loyal to the end ! 

He drew me to him as a star 

Draws mortal gaze to heaven afar. 

My young soul in its ardor grew 

To love his band; their ways I knew. 

Here where the swarthy negroes bold, 

Never to be in slavery sold, 

As was their doom in days of old. 

Ere they became brave refugees ; 

Only to him they bent the knees — 

Their Chief ! 

Here were the red men true, 
Stolid and brave to dare and do; 
These were the mighty ones 1 knew 
In those young days of long ago. 
And their foe was my deadly foe ! 
For Osceola drew free breath. 
And slavery was living Death ! 



OSCEOLA. 31 

My heart, my sympathy I gave 

Unto the mighty Chief so brave. 

His eagle eyes oft looked in mine ; 

Stalwart was he as forest pine ; 

He led us thro' the dense morass, 

'Mid tangled woods and waving grass, 

And garlanded, the foe we chased, 

Relentlessly as blood hounds track 

Their quarry, and ne'er turned we back ! 

Beneath the swaying palms we rode 

Whose leaves like daggers hung; 

And under fruit of gold we strode, 

While battle songs were sung. 

Birds of blue and green and red 

Hovered o'er each feathered head 

For the fierce war-path bonnetted 

'Mid slyvan haunts where fruit was pressed, 

Like children to the mother-breast ; 

Where the deer, startled from his rest, 

Sped like an arrow from the bow. 

And the bear wandered to and fro. 

At blush of dawn our steps would go ; 

Living the life that Freedom knows — 



32 OSCEOLA. 

Its energy — its grand repose ! 
Our weapons were the arrows keen 
The bow, the knife, the tomahawk; 
Not for wild creatures of the scene 
That thro' the everglades would stalk ; 
''These were for Tyrants only made — " 
These weapons borne thro' everglade 
And gorgeous vines, upon our trail : 
So said our Chief. As summer gale. 
His words were soft. His heart was kind 
As maiden's in its peace enshrined ! 
As gentle as the bronze-eyed fawn 
That crops the herbage of the dawn ! 

We halted by the streams 
That sang, as if in dreams; 
Where fair magnolias grew 
And winds their fragrance blew. 
The campfire's smoke upcurled, 
Like sails that were unfurled. 



OSCEOLA. 33 

Then would the great Chief walk apart, 
And muse beside the babbling stream, 
Or gaze upon the far-off stars 
That trembled in the majesty 
Of God ! 

'Twas there I sought him once, 
And there he told me of his wrongs. 
His beauteous bride had in her veins 
The blood that doomed her for a slave ! 
How she was taken, to be sold 
As beast of burden, in those days! 
How he had pled for her release, 
And how the scoff and bitter jibe 
Of pale faces had wrung his heart 
To deadly vengeance. "I tight them not," 
He said, "because the face is white; 
It is because the heart is black ! 
With treachery deep-dyed their soul ! 
I war for Freedom of all men ! 
So shall I till Life's sun departs." 



34 OSCEOLA. 

Again at dawn the trail we took, 

By moss-hung trees, and winding brook; 

Green, tangled depths, where wild birds piped 

And nimble squirrels, brownly striped, 

Like bolts of lightning, flashed in air. 

And hid in trees all sunlit fair. 

Then rang the war whoop piercing wild; 
The rifle cracked ; and knives out-flashed ; 
Blood reddened every inch of sod; 
Dripped at our belts the pale face scalps ! 
The wild flight to our swamps, at dusk. 
And we secure from hand of foe! 
The battle raged, day after day, 

Then came a lull. 

Where we were hid 
Gay butterflies, with wavering wings. 
Poised on the air, like flying flowers ; 
The mocking bird its song outpoured 
In thankfulness to bounteous God! 
But rest was brief ; the stern command 
Of Osceola rang once more. 
And on the war-path sped his band 
To victory. 



OSCEOLA. 35 

So fell my lot, 
One day, to linger in the camp, 
Bade by my Chief to watch and guard. 
Idly I lay 'neath tropic skies. 
There, bathed in sunset's radiant gold, 
Before me stood an Indian girl, 
Dark-eyed, and lovely as a queen ! 
My heart was hers, e'en while I gazed ! 
The daughter of a Chief was she— 
A mighty Chief — with heart of stone! 
And he would have his daughter wed 
A slave-trader, with many wives — 
Fair sample of the hideous trade ! 
A harem had he 'mid these wilds 
Of dusky hued, and black and white ! 
We wandered on thro' blossoming trees, 
Where humming bees and warbling birds 
Made musical the canopies 
Of leaves above, where glinted thro* 
The deep blue of the skies of Heaven, 
And spoke we then of Love ! 

True love. 
That fills the heart with sweetest bliss ! 



36 OSCEOLA. 

The hope, the joy of all desire, 

A balm, and a consuming flame ! 

We drifted in our bark canoe 

'Neath drooping palms, where lilies bloomed, 

Not whiter, fairer, than her soul ! 

Thro' fragrant breath of orange groves 

We glided ; saw the stars arise 

And set ; and sang she there for me 

A song; like cooing of the dove 

Unto its mate : no song more sweet 

Was ever heard in Paradise! 

Alas, but happiness is brief, 

And Love — a flower that fades at eve ! 

What strange canoes swung into sight? 
What rifles gleamed in hands of might? 
Bound were we there, and led away 
Unto a city old and gray ! 
They placed me in a noisome cell 
Wherein no gleam of daylight fell — 
Rock-hewn, in Spanish days of old. 
Chilly, and hung with slimy mould. 
I moaned, I cried in my despair, 



OSCEOLA. 37 

Like pinioned leopard in its lair ! 

I cursed my lot, with bitter tears — 

The echo was but savage jeers ! 

A keeper came, thrust thro' a door 

Bread, water; then locked, as before 

That egress — all was dark once more ! 

One night as I bemoaned my Fate, 

Left hopeless, dying, desolate, 

I heard the jailer's jingling keys; 

A trembling smote my hands, my knees ; 

But 'twas the thrill of wild delight ! 

In buckskin garbed, dawned on my sight 

My loved one ! 

In each other's arms, 
What cared we then for all the harms 
That vengeance sought on us to wreak? 
"What do you here, my darhng — speak?" 
I whispered, *T have come to save 
My true love from his living grave !" 
She answered, ''Doomed to torture dire — 
The horrid rack, the deadly fire, 
This was your portion ! 



38 OSCEOLA. 

I am here 
Oh, my beloved, do not fear! 
And I remain to take your place! 
Nay, look not so, with ashen face ! 
Horses are near ; go, dearest, go !" 
She said, with cheeks of love aglow. 
"What does this mean?" my heart outspoke; 
But swifter than the lightning's stroke 
Fell on my ears her words of dread : 
"It means, you rescued from the dead 
A soul that sinned forevermore, 
And from perdition did restore 
A lone, despairing, worthless one 
Shunned by all good beneath the sun ! 
No purity was in my heart 
Till love of yours came to impart 
Its healing balm; as lilies are, 
In whiteness, you have made my soul 
So it may seek its envied goal — ' 
The happy hunting grounds; for when 
Your lips touched mine, ah, then, ah, then, 
Love made of me — the vulture foul — 
In search of prey, a dove ! 



OSCEOLA. 39 

Fiends prowl 
To seek your death ! 

Go! Leave me! Go!" 

"Then let us both escape," I said, 

She shook her head, and answered, "No!" 

Recoiling from my arms in dread. 

'T am not fit to share your love, 

Tho' dear it is as Heaven above ! 

To-day I was to have been wed," 

And in her shame she bowed her head. 

"The hardened sinner here would rest; 

I die for you — it is the best! 

That Fate alone for me is blest ! 

I hear their footsteps ! Go, love, fly !" 

"And leave you here alone ? Not I !" 

I spoke, and caught her to my heart, 

"No! you and I shall never part!" 

She drew a dagger from her girth, 

I dashed it swiftly to the earth! 

The door flew open; swift as light 

A steed I mounted, in my flight, 

And lifted her unto my side. 

As o'er the trail, quick, bound on bound, 

We sped ! 



40 OSCEOLA. 

Click ! came the fateful sound 
Of rifle! 

With its deadly aim : 

A spurt from her breast came, 

And silent in my arms she lay ! 

On, on, with the speed of a cyclone, my bay 
Dashed into the open, away and away ! 
With one arm I held my dear burden, so pale, 
But words that 1 spoke there could nothing avail. 

By river and ford. 

By hill and ravine ; 

Past forests so broad 

Of dew-spangled green ; 

'Neath tall, bearded trees 

Moss-tangled, we flew ; 

With Death on the breeze — 

Yet no rein I drew ! 

Crack ! Crack ! rifles blazed. 

Swift bullets sang 'round; 

Still forward I gazed 

Nor heeded their sound. 

T called her dear name ! 



OSCEOLA. 41 

I pleaded that she 
Would speak! Pressed her cheek, 
Ah ! how cold 'twas to me ! 
My wild, panting steed 
Paused no whit in his flight ; 
But each word he would heed. 
Was there rescue in sight? 
Thro' the river we splashed, 
Up the steep bank we dashed ; 
And at the dying of the day 
As rescue, safety, far away, 
Was almost in my startled grasp ! 
I felt her hand's convulsive clasp, 
Then all was still ! 

I knew no more, 
Until a grave face bending o'er 
My form, recalled me back to light 
And Life! 

And he who met my sight 
Was Osceola, Chief and friend! 
And so my story has its end. 

♦ * * * 



42 OSCEOLA. 

We made her grave beneath the pines, 
Where evermore the lily twines 
In loving friendship with the rose, 
And swift winds sigh at day's repose. 
I pressed her lips ere in that tomb 
I left her in her beauty's bloom ! 
And ever after, in sweet dreams, 
I've heard her voice — so near it seems ! 
Her light canoe glides swiftly by 
At twilight, 'neath that tropic sky, 
And on the air her song is heard 
Mingled with night-songs of the bird. 
Years afterwards I sought the spot 
Where she was laid, but found it not ; 
But the light leaves that warm winds stir, 
Seemed ever whispering of her ! 
I felt her breath upon my cheek. 
Her eyes beamed on me, softly meek ! 
Away ! it was the dream of yore 
Those Seminole days live no more, 
And all their joys and griefs are o'er ! 



OSCEOLA. 43 

But Osceola, what of him? 

The well-fought battle sounds grew dim. 

They led my Chief in chains away — 

His spirit broken — from the fray ; 

That spirit proud had never bent 

Before ! 

What nobler monument 

Should be than his whose stolen lands 

Divided were by white man's hands? 

Whose kin were severed from his heart, 

Whose wife was sold at Slavery's mart? 

Conquered in the unequal fight 

Where bullets dared the arrows' flight. 

He looms, heroic and sublime, 

A noble warrior thro' all time ! 

O, glorious Nation that with might 

Hath trodden down the Indian's Right ! 

Hath sown your vices in his path ! 

Will there not come a day of wrath 

When all shall surely righted be ! 

Take heed lest this dark day you see, 

When the red man, in God's own time. 

Shall rise in judgment in your crime ! 

Florida, 1880. 



THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL 



What city of that long forgotten past 
Here built its homes, and braved the furnace-blast f 
What loves, what hopes, here had their glorious birth, 
And lived their hours upon this spot of earthf 



Tne Watchers of the Trail 

(Arizona.) 

High o'er the desert's leagues of bleaching sand 

That seems to quiver in the blinding glare, 

No blade of living green on either hand, 

With only desolation in the air, 

And silence, breathing Death and grim Despair, 

With helpless horror brooding everywhere 

The spirit of the scene — a grizzly stands 

Upon a peak whose eminence commands 

The utmost limit of these lonely lands. 

Above him rise still grander heights of snow, 

Up, up, until they lose themselves in clouds ; 

While gorge and ravine yawning far below. 

Whose awful deeps the darkest shadow shrouds, 

Unlighted by the sunset's dying glow, 

A sense of fearful majesty bestow. 

Rich purple, fit for panoply of kings. 

The setting orb inimitably flings 

O'er purest white of snows for ages laid 

Far, far above the towering pine-tree glade^ 

And mingled hues of pearl and amethyst 



50 THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 

Blend o'er the scene in gold and purple mist! 
As if the hand of God, at shut of day, 
Were softly laid upon His glorious work, 
That it might hide from awe-pierced eyes away 
Yon desert where dark, fell Destruction lay ! 
The arrows of the sunset, tipped with fire, 
Glanced over gorge and over rocky spire, 
For like some vast Cathedral's massive height 
The grand Sierras loom upon the sight 
This sunset hour ; and thro' their cloven aisles, 
Lo ! 'tis Almighty God who sweetly smiles ! 
The wind's soft sigh is like the prelude fair 
Of some vast organ calling man to prayer! 
And deeper, deeper flash the radiant dyes 
Of those translucent, iridescent skies 
Till Heaven seems opened to the raptured gaze 
And human hearts pause in devout amaze ! 
The spirit of the scene stood silent there. 
Distinctly limned against this scene so fair. 
Huge, fierce, as if to supreme anger wrought 
At what the years in onward course had brought. 
He seemed to mark the desert's deadly waste ; 
The mountains wild in adamant encased ; 



THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 51 

The snowy peaks ; the weird abyss beneath ; 

The river, like a sword without a sheath, 

Glancing afar ; the pine trees darkly green — 

All these he marked — the spirit of the scene — 

Then to my heart, in accents eloquent, 

A message from that dizzy height was sent, 

And with the glory of the scene was blent 

In never fading, and resistless power, 

From him — the Prophet of the sunset hour! 

From him whose feet had trodden year by year 

Yon valleys low, and yon aerial sphere 

Whose only limit is the keen-eyed stars 

Which sentinel the realm that Heaven bars 

From mortal ken ! And thus the message sped : 

"These paths by man untrodden, wild and lone, 

The lapse of Ages, since earth's dawn, have known! 

Yon silvery river murmuring to the sea 

Will ripple on till Time no more shall be ; 

These caverns held in hollow of God's hand 

Will rear their heads precipitately grand 

And frown o'er yonder parching desert sand; 

While storms of Winter turbulent and free 

Will wolf-like howl in fierce and angry might. 



52 THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 

Resounding still from awful height to height, 

'Mid blinding whirls of sleet and feathery snow, 

When icy winds tumultuously blow ! 

And man will pass away, aye, race by race, 

No more on earth to have a biding place. 

His bones will whiten yonder gleaming sands, 

And all the labor of his busy hands 

Will prove of no avail, howe'er he toil, 

And garner, in his greed, the golden spoil 

Of these wild lands ! Yet these forever last — 

These battlements and towers grandly vast, 

Forever soaring to the skies afar. 

Above the world's incessant hum and jar, 

A living monument of Deity supreme 

To mock man's power, and scorn his wildest dream 

Of grand achievement! Yea, these pass not by 

Till like a scroll shall rolled up be the sky 

In flame and earthquake shock and gloom 

Wild portents of the judgment day of Doom ! 

Time was, when o'er yon desert's mighty space, 

The buflfalo would darken Nature's face 

In numbers countless as the ocean's waves 

Or, as on earth, are mankind's mouldering graves ! 



THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 53 

As if the clouds that brought the hurricane 

Had swept their vampire-wings across the plain 

And hovered there ! Where are those legions now 

That thundered past the vales and hills, as prow 

Of vessel plunges in the ocean's brine, 

Or cleft-rock flies adown the steep decline ? 

Gone! Not one vestige of their bones remains 

To speak their prowess on yon sterile plains ! 

Oft have I seen the canvas wagons thread 

The path upon the dried-up river's bed — 

Like tiny sails of white they sped along 

And faintly on the breeze I heard the song 

Of many a brave and stalwart settler-throng 

Upon its way towards the boundless West, 

While here I've listened on this lofty crest! 

How oft I've watched the twinkling campfire's gleam. 

Like fireflies, by the starry-lighted stream, 

While o'er the tent the midnight hush descended 

And all the toils of day in dreams were ended ! 

Where are those brave and sun-bronzed hearts of yore? 

Go search the sands, you ne'er will find them more ! 

Lost, swallowed up by Time's devouring might — 

Gone like the lightning's flash in depths of night 



54 THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 

Unmarked, unnoticed in oblivion's flight ! 
Yet still this canon's deeps in shadow lie, 
And still these rocks immeasurably high 
Heed not the years in their incessant flow ; 
Massive they stand as in ages long ago ! 
The golden arrows of the lightning strike ; 
But bolt or sunbeam is to them alike ; 
The rains and snows beat on them year by year. 
But all unscathed their ancient forms appear. 
As when they first in elemental strife 
Sprang, at God's bidding, to insensate life! 
Born of the earthquake's globe uprending shock, 
Heaving stupendous rock high up on rock ; 
Measureless chasm and abyss tremendous, 
Down, shear down, where cataracts leap by ; 
Gorge, gulch, declivity and walls stupendous. 
Where never gleams the light of yonder sky ! 
Home of the eagle, and the vulture's haunt. 
Where silently they poise on moveless wings ! 
Ah, vain is man and every idle vaunt 
Of prowess than in vanity he sings 
When measured with this handiwork of God — 
Towers of the world, bv human feet untrod ! 



THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 55 

Creation's dawn first saw this majesty 

Of mountains sentinelling yonder vales — 

First heard the grand and fearful symphony 

Awaken in the fury of its gales, 

And thunder down these vast cathedral aisles 

Where never blossom in the sunlight smiles ! 

So far away that scarcely eye could scan 

Like specks appeared the savage caravan, 

Trailing the tepees o'er the arid waste, 

Or spurring on in wild ferocious haste 

To where the pioneers their tents had placed, 

In fancied safety, for a night of rest 

And peaceful dreams, where never ills molest. 

Then on the dreamers beamed the home-light sweet 

Whose cheerful rays their eyes no more would greet! 

The home beside the river's flowerv side 

Before their vision stood in humble pride ; 

The well-sweep and the barn were theirs once more. 

And living faces and delights of yore. 

As if the fiends of Hell had all arisen — 

Had rushed headlong from out their lurid prison, 

The painted foe upon the quarry swept, 

And Death their portion was while calmly slept 



56 THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 

Mother and babe, and maidens in their glow, 

And manhood, and old age with locks of snow ! 

Sphinx-like this mountain's face down-gazed 

Impassive, stern, nor more amazed 

Than if the sound of Angels' hovering wings 

Had fallen there in grateful murmurings ! 

Or if the grand celestial choir had sung 

In rapturous measure, past all mortal tongue 

Or mind of human to conceive : so gazed 

This mountain, pitiless and unamazed ! 

Noon on the desert's white and gleaming waste, 

A copper sky whereon no cloud is traced; 

No glance of water glimmers to the sight, 

No sound of bird or beast, from left to right, 

Or anywhere, nothing save quivering blight ! 

The cactus rears its tiny spears ; no shade 

For endless leagues along the trackless path 

No longer swept by cyclone in its wrath. 

That hurled the sleet-like sand in whirls of fire 

Stinging the hapless traveler, like fire ! 

No breath of air to fan the swollen veins 

That choked with blood stand out upon the skin 

Of laboring broncho, on whose neck the reins 



THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 57 

Hang loosely o'er his mane. Dejected, thin, 
Devoured by thirst, his rider's anxious gaze 
Scans, hand o'er eyes, the soul-tormenting blaze, 
His black lips cracked, and red with spirted blood ; 
While in his feverish fancy pours a flood. 
In tantalizing gushes, just afar 
Where yonder mirage tells where green hills are! 
The trail is lost ! He staggers aimlessly, 
For yonder oasis holds life and rest! 
A few more steps and safety he can see. 
And sweet repose upon fair Nature's breast! 
He shouts as shouts the maniac in glee ! 
Another step, 'tis all, to reach yon tree 
That waves its branches in the cooling air! 
Still on and on his blundering footsteps fare, 
For fast recedes that vision from his eyes 
Beneath the fire that falleth from the skies 
To wither 'neath its touch both man and beast, 
And fit them for the vulture's watched- for feast! 
Oh, God of Heaven, 'tis pitiful to lie 
Out on the desert lone, and slowly die ; 
To seem to hear the babbling, silver brooks 
Singing their way along in mossy nooks ! 



58 THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 

To know that help is gone forevermore, 

And all Life's purposes and plans are o'er! 

Was this the end to be of search for gold? — 

These wanderings and horrors manifold? 

Ah, glazed eyes fixed upon the dome above, 

Who now will close those lids with hands of love? 

Who softly still those writhing limbs of thine? 

Whose loving arms thy wasted form entwine ? 

E'en now, afar, mayhap some loved one waits 

To welcome thee, the while she contemplates 

Thy safe return to Home and all that's dear, 

Within her heart no haunting thought of fear ! 

And, hopeless, watching, as year follows year, 

Will say : '*He has forgotten those he knew 

In the old days, before he proved untrue !" 

Meanwhile he lies upon the barren sands, 

Stretched white upon his breast those bony hands ! 

His sepulchre the dim, lone desert's reach. 

His requiem the eagle's raucous screech ! 

And yet God knows, and understands ! 

Back in the flight of Time, yea, eons back. 

My spirit flies, and sees no vapid track ; 

But hordes that dwelt upon this flowerless land — 



THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 59 

The men of old of stalwart limb 

Whose eyes the sun-blaze could not dim. 

What city of that long forgotten past 

Here built its homes, and braved the furnace-blast ? 

What loves, what hopes, here had their glorious birth, 

And lived their hours upon this spot of earth? 

The songs of childhood, and the laugh of youth, 

The words of wisdom and the voice of truth. 

Here oft were heard beneath the swaying palm, 

And golden hours were passd in joy and calm, 

Where roses gave the fragrance of their balm 

To winds that played 'mid tresses dark or fair ; 

And mirth was ringing on the wandering air ! 

Now every breath is laden with Despair! 

No purposes that live in human heart 

But in long ages back have played their part 

Beneath this sky ! Perchance here flowed the sea 

In all its wild and peerless majesty! 

And sails were wafted from their havens here 

While songs of sailors rang with merry cheer 

Long after cities had lain buried here ! 

What centuries of human woe and weal 

Could not these mute and Time-swept sands reveal? 



60 THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 

Peaks of the ancient world, we ask in vain ! 

Ye answer not unto our plea ! Again 

I turn me to the sphinx-like mountain's brow, 

And in my helplessness I humbly bow ! 

Ye answer not, who all could now unfold, 

Clad in soft raiment of the sunset's gold, 

Crowned with the glory that surpasses kings 

Beauty of star and moon; and all that brings 

Loveliness to earth kneels at thy feet. 

And offer thee the homage of the morn; 

The grandeur of the tempest wreathes thee 'round, 

The lightning's gold is that with which thou'rt crowned, 

Thy jewels are the dew drops newly born! 

Lo ! still yon beast looks o'er the desert scene 

Bathed in the sunset's beatific sheen — 

Deep-woven dyes resplendently serene! 

Dark painted there against yon background gray, 

Illumined by each evanescent ray. 

The Prophet of this lone aerial height. 

Moveless it stands amid the splendor bright. 

Now fades the purple from the dimming West, 

The gold the crimson wreathing peak and crest. 

The changing hues upon the snowy breast 



THE WATCHERS OF THE TRAIL. 61 

Of these Sierras. Soundless grows the air, 

Like barques, with sails of pearl, the clouds 

Float on their seas inimitably fair, 

To harbors that the coming Night enshrouds. 

God's flowers — the stars — now one by one appear, 

As twilight in deep beauty hovers near, 

Like some sweet Angel hushing all to rest 

As dies the last faint glimmer in the West ! 

Then from the brilliant orbs there seems to fall 

A hush as if to prayer they summoned all 

Of earth ! And e'en these peaks seem bowed in prayer, 

While moonlight bends in benediction there ! 

So thro' the night these awful caverns loom 

Steeped in their vast impenetrable gloom! 

Still, echoless, no sound of whirring wing, 

Till Morn shall come, in grandeur of a king, 

And plant upon these walls his standard bright 

While fly the scattered legions of the Night ! 

Arizona — 1904. 



RAMONA 



/ was an outcast, shunned by all! 
By night I heard the wolf-pack call. 



R^amona 

Beside the tepee's door she sat; 
The murmur of the cataract 
That leapt from rocky cleft to cleft 
Was all the sound she heard. Bereft 
Of all that life and love held dear, 
A moment then she paused to hear 
The accents of her little boy, 
Playing beside her in his joy. 
A bow and arrow held he there, 
And little knew her heart's despair ! 
Her open arms she held to him 
While tears her darksome eyes made dim, 
And these words told her woe and care : 
"Come close to me, my poor, lone boy, 
My anguish, and my soul's dear joy ! 
Nay, look not in mine eyes with fear, 
For the last time I clasp thee here ! 
I go where love knows not deceit, 
Where only love is ever sweet — 
The Father's! In that happy land 
Beyond the stars. Oh, proud and grand 



68 RAMONA 

Thy father once held me to his breast, 
And first these raven locks caressed, 
It seems not many moons ago 
The blissful mem'ry haunts me so! 
My life is fading, as the day 
That sinks in yonder clouds away; 
Soon comes the night ; alas, for me ! 
Another day I shall not see ! 
So let me quickly tell to you 
My story, as yon heavens true ! 
Afar from here, 'neath torrid skies, 
And peaks that to the stars arise ; 
Where torrents like a whirlwind dash, 
And sounds the thunder's awful crash ; 
Where step of white man rarely trod, 
The red man dwelt. He was my God- 
That stranger who one day I found 
Within the tepee, strongly bound, 
Reserved for torture when the sun 
That day its lurid course had run ! 
I had a heart that could endure 
All pangs, and keep its purpose sure ; 
An Indian maiden does not fear! 



RAMONA 69 

But there was something in those eyes 
That gazed upon me, deep and clear — 
Something my heart could not despise! 
They seemed to say, *Oh, save me, girl! 
And I will give my heart's dear pearl — 
Its tender love alone, to thee!' 
My soul went out in sympathy. 
Oh, God! that this the end must be! 
I gave him one assuring glance, 
And left the rest to time and chance ; 
For I could not the stranger leave 
In misery to moan and grieve 
Knowing that death his fate would be 
Ere midnight fell o'er rock and tree! 
I watched, and to the tepee crept, 
While all the tribe in silence slept ! 
No sound except the night wind's moan, 
I stood before him there alone ! 
Unbound the thongs, and set him free ! 
Led him to where he safe would be 
Oh, God ! for white man's treachery ! 
A pale face with a heart as black 
As midnight! Boy, the time I lack 



70 RAMONA 

To tell thee how my heart was won. 
And how I loved, thy parent, son ! 
My father was a chief, and stern. 
And when he came the truth to learn 
He died in grief — I left his side: 
The Indian maiden was the bride 
Of one to whom she gave her life — 
Her life of Love, thro' ev'ry strife! 
Days passed away; we happy were 
Within the City's whirl and stir; 
I lived but for his love alone, 
He was the Sun that o'er me shone ! 
His was the smile that was a star 
To guide me on to joy afar ! 
I never dreamed that untruth lay 
Within his vile soul day by day ! 
I never thought he could forget 
The life I saved him ! with regret 
I saw his love fade as the star 
That ushers in the dawn afar ! 
But thou hadst come to be my joy, 
My ruddy, little joy-faced boy! 
For thee I lived, his taunts I bore, 



RAMON A 71 



But from this heart his love I tore, 
When for another he forsook 
His wife ; and boy, his life I took ! 
I tracked him with the steps of Fate- 
Even an Indian squaw can hate ! 



I was an outcast, shunned by all ! 
By night I heard the wolf -pack call ; 
But it was sweeter to my ear 
Than heartless laughter, jibe and jeer 
Heaped on a poor forsaken wife — 
No home, no friend, no rest in life! 
Oft I have paused upon the side 
Of yonder canons yawning wide 
And watched the thread of silver flow 
Thousands of feet away below. 
And thought to plunge within its breast 
To find an end in dreamless rest ! 
But thou wert near : how could I leave 
My boy, my pride, alone to grieve ? 
'Tis better as it is : I go 
Beyond these peaks of living snow 



72 RAMONA 

Where the Great Spirit cares for all 
However mean, however small ! 
For heeds He not a sparrow's fall ? 



Just now I placed within thy hand 
The poisoned arrow of our band 
And bade thee aim with childish glee 
The bow-string held upon thy knee ! 
Kiss me ! One clasp ! to rest I go ! 
Weep not, my boy, thou couldst not know 
That death lurked in the poisoned dart — 
Thank God the arrow reached my heart ! 



The night fell o'er her like a pall 
While pitying stars looked on her there ! 
Once happy, young, unknown to care- 
But now bereaved of life and all ! 
So paosed she from the earth away. 
Biding in peace God's judgment day ! 



MOANEE 
A TALE OF THE FOOT-HILLS 



/ tell this legend, as it was told 

By the camp-fires in the times of old, 

When the blue smoke rose above the pines, 
In a thousand curling, weaving lines, 

And the warriors of the plains, at peace, 
To all their battles gave surcease. 



Moanee. 

(A Tale of the Foot-Hills.) 

Hark to this tale of the foot-hills lone — 

This legend that lights the Western zone 
With its glow of human kindliness 

That the savage heart, lothe to confess 
Still shows, like gold hid in dull earth, 

Which to the eye puts forth its mirth 
After the passion-shock of storm 

That rends the pine trees towering form. 
Hark to the night-winds ! in their tones 

Fancy may hear the parting moans 
Of many a brave in days of old 

Who reddened these arid, level sands, 
As ancient legends have often told, 

In the wild foray, where the savage bold 
With his schemes of cunning manifold. 

Oft led to battle his murderous bands. 
Here are whitened bones that peep to-day 

When the storm-wind sweeps the sands awaj. 
Here are arrows that have sped their flight 

In the horrible tumult of the fight ; 
Yon grand, majestic cliff could tell 



78 MOANEE. 

Of the wild and hideous savage yell, 
Like a voice that came from the pits of hell ! 

And this canon's dim and vasty deeps 
Where breathless silence ever keeps 

Its lair, with awesome vigilance, 
Could whisper of the fierce advance, 

In war-paint hideous to view, 
Of cruel hordes, here to imbue 
Their hands in hated tribal blood 
That flowed like a sunset-tinted flood 
When the carnage of the strife began, 
Not the panther in his mighty wrath 
Prowled to destroy, on his midnight path, 
With a more relentless, vengeful hate 
Than the savage showed while he would wait, 
Low-crouched, upon these level plains, 
Once deeply dyed with gory stains. 
For the coming of his treacherous foe 
In the horrible days of the long ago! 
Not a rattlesnake with its head erect. 
And its coils with dark-hued scales bedecked, 
Bore such malignance in its glance 
As the savage eyes, keen as a lance. 



MOANEE. 79 



Glared at the signs along the trail, 
Which never he had known to fail. 
That told him of the stealthy tread 
Of the enemy he was taught to dread 
By long hereditary spite, 
In those terrible days of savage might ! 
So I tell the legend, as it was told 
By the camp-fires in the times of old, 
When the blue smoke rose above the pines. 
In a thousand curling, waving lines, 
And the warriors of the plains, at peace, 
To all their battles gave surcease. 



Fairest of Indian maids — 
Sprite of these emerald glades — 

Was Moanee, whose sire 
The Chieftain proud and brave. 
Ne'er would to foeman crave — 

Whose heart was raging fire ! 
Her step was like the fawn's 
That glided at the dawn's 

First light upon the hill I 



80 MOANEE. 

Her hair, the raven's wing 
That poised above the spring 

That gHstened 'mid the bloom ! 
Her eyes were dark of hue, 
Bespeaking courage true, 

And still untouched by gloom. 
The child of Nature's choice, 
Lovely, and mild of voice, 

A maid beyond all fear; 
Joy of the Chieftain's heart, 
Of his lone life a part 

His comfort year by year. 
She grew to womanhood, 
This nymph of grove and wood, 

The tribe's bright hope and joy; 
Woe to the blighting hand — 
Death to the dastard band 

Would Moanee destroy ! 

There was no deed too bold 
In those dark days of old 
Nor punishment too dire 
Of fiercest, torture-fire 



MOANEE. 81 



To visit on his head 

Who dared the might so dread 

Of Moanee's proud sire ! 

He loved her with a passion tender, 

To him she was his all in all ; 

Her thought was but of him ; to render 

A daughter's love whate'er might fall, 

Tho' o'er him grew the clouds of sorrow, 

Tho' tempests of defeat each morrow 

Assailed him, she was ne'er denied. 

Tho' her Life's joys were multiplied 

For this red chief of all his race 

Upon whose grand and stoic face 

Love set its mark of haughty pride 

In her — the daughter at his side ! 

In chase and battle she was near 

The bow and arrow in her hands 

Answered her spirit's swift commands; 

And all the tribe her prowess knew, 

Paying her queenly reverence due; 

For was she not their Warrior Queen, 

In savage womanhood serene, 

The naiad of that desert scene ? 



82 MOANEE. 

But Love had come to the maiden's heart, 
With all its sweetness and all its pain — 
The keen delight and the bitter smart — 
Its burst of starlight, its tears of rain ! 
She gave her soul to her sire-chief's foe 
Brave Eagle- Wing, who in many a blow 
Of fiercest conflict her sire defied. 
She had promised to become his bride 
When Autumn leaves had to crimson changed, 
And the wildwood trail o'er which they ranged 
Had its emerald glories turned to gold 
In a wealth of beauties manifold. 
But a rival warrior of her band 
Had wooed her for her heart and hand — 
Lone Wolf, who looked with a scowl of hate 
On his enemy kindlier used by Fate ; 
Who was smiled upon by the maiden fair 
Whom the tribe had guarded with tender care; 
And for vengeance sought he early and late. 
She had laughed his ardent vows to scorn, 
All her sharp rebukes he had meekly borne, 
But within his breast his smouldering ire 
Lay buried, like the volcano's fire, 



MOANEE. 83 

And he vowed to win her, his heart's desire ! 

But the Indian maiden arch, yet coy, 

Went on her way in the bountiful joy 

Of a Love that Heaven to her had sent — 

In which each thread of Life's woof was blent! 

The dawn was tinting peaks of snow 
With its enamelled, roseate glow, 
That flashed from rocky cleft and cave 
To boundless deeps of gloom below, 
And to the scene a grandeur gave. 
As the glinting arrows of the sun 
Glanced here and there, with light intense, 
In a maze of wild magnificence ! 
The Western world from nest awoke. 
And mists arose on high — 
The great All Spirit to invoke — 
Ascending, incense-like, unto the sky! 
It was a Dawn, as yet, of Peace. 
The mountain-torrents, as in play. 
Tossed to the breeze their diamond spray ; 
And leaped along from steep to steep, 
Sparkling in every crevice deep. 



84 MOANEE. 

The birds poured forth a matin song 

That rippled down the jubilant breeze, 

And rang in joyous symphonies 

The leafy groves along. 

It was Dawn, as yet, of Life 

All unembittered by the strife 

Of foes in turbulent array, 

As if to mock the glorious Day 

New-born unto a teeming earth ! 

As if to turn to darkest dearth 

Fair scenes with gladness rife ! 

Hark ! with a horrible rush and a roar — ■ 
Boom of the surf on a storm-smitten shore — • 
Crash of the terrible avalanche-pour 

Met mighty legions contending! 
Faces that gleam with a fiendish delight, 
War-painted ; arrows in murderous flight. 
Steeds that out-thundered in hoof-beating might 

Tempests their fury expending! 
Out of the hell of the battle that rages — 
Like unto beasts just set free from their cages — 
Eagle Wing singles out Lone Wolf, while he 

Watches his rival. 



MOANEE. 85 

The challenge is given, 
While the blue firmament o'er them is riven 
With yells that are momently stifled in Death ! 
And trampling of steeds that are crushing the breath 
From foemen whose war-paint in mockery there 
Mingles with gore in the sun's vivid glare ! 
On speed the rivals o'er the plain, 
Until a space apart they gain 
Far from the battle's deafening din ; 
Their prize — 'the maid, each strives to win ! 
The mountains tower on either side, 
The river glistens deep and wide, 
The pine trees look in lofty pride 
Upon the warriors bold ; 
Alas ! a moment later they see 
Prone on the sands, in agony, 
Elagle Wing whose death rattle sounds 
Amid those silent, desert mounds ! 
His dying steed beside him lies, 
O'er them the glaring, parching skies. 
Lone Wolf looks on his rival's fate 
With glances of malignant hate. 
A haughty smile comes o'er his brow. 



86 MOANEE. 

But, lo ! with sweet compassion now 
He from the saddle swiftly swings, 
And running to the river brings 
A draught of water for those lips 
Deep-purpling in pale Death's ecHpse ! 
He bids him drink in accents mild, 
As he would speak unto a child. 
"Moanee!" came the whisper low; 
"Moanee ! Love ! from Life I go, 
Bearing the sweetest thoughts of ihee 
Unto the happy hunting land ; 
By the Great Spirit thus set free ! 
Farewell! Farewell, forevermore!" 
Then no sound the zephyrs onward bore. 

Down from the zig-zag mountain trail. 
Rushed the Indian maiden wild and pale, 
With a horde of warriors following her 
Over the dangerous rock-ribbed spur ! 
She is kneeling by her lover's side, 
She is holding him unto her breast, 
In the anguish of her soul's unrest ! 
Lone Wolf, pursued, made prisoner 



MOANEE. 87 

And firmly bound they brought to her. 
She cast on him a loathing look 
Of deepest scorn. 

"This in thy work !" 
She cried, and from quiver took 

Her keenest arrow. 

"Shall there lurk 
Within my heart one pitying thought 
For him who has this foul deed wrought? 
Die!" 

"Stay your hand!" Lone Wolf replied, 
"In gage of battle thus he died ! 
My life was free for him to take ! 
It was the chance of War that gave 
Me life, and him the silent grave ! 
Not for your pity now I crave. 
The Indian brave fears not to go 
Where he has sent his conquered foe ! 
My heart relented ere had fled 
The spirit of the noble dead 
I brought wherewith to quench his thirst, 
And back to life I would have nursed 
Him for your sake, because your love 



88 MOANEE. 

Is dearest to my heart — above 
All thoughts of vengeance !" 

'Mid her band, 
The arrow dropped from out her hand. 
**Loose him, and let him safely go!" 
She said, ''Were he the foulest foe 
I could not, would not do him harm 
For he was kind, his noble arm 
Would soothe where he had laid the blow ! 
A father gone in this day's fight : 
Oh, do I read your thoughts aright, 
Brave band, and Chief he now shall be !" 
Lone Wolf thanked her, on bended knee, 
Kissing the hand she offered him 
There in the twilight gathering dim. 

Then the pine trees gazed on another scene 

After the lapse of moons serene; 

And the mountains seemed to hide their frown 

Silently, solemnly peering down 

On the festal dance and the songs of glee, 

As Lone Wolf wedded fair Moanee! 



THE OREGONIAN 



Why for Eastern delights should my restless heart sighf 
Here dwelleth all joys that the earth can supply. 
In the open for me, is the heart's pure desire, 
With a room for Content, and a sphere to Aspire! 
On the trail, in the round up of cattle, I sing, 
With the lariat unleashed, like a bird on the wing! 
Here, alone, I am lord, in my freedom a king ! 



Xhe Oregonian 

Under the skies of the infinite azure, 
Under the silver of myriad stars ; 
Nigh to the mountain's majestic embrasure, 
Awful and grand with its abysmal scars ; 
Here let me bide in my joyous contentment — 
Here with the birds and the cattle that roam — 
Owing the world not a tithe of resentment, 
Over me God's multitudinous dome ! 
Long leagues of land in the blaze of the sunlight, 
Stretching afar to the horizon's verge; 
Then, at the darkness, the soft gleam of one light- 
Star of my cabin — while homeward I urge. 
Here it is God's Land, and Heaven is nearer ! 
Dies all the petty contention of earth ; 
Even the brooks and the flowers seem dearer 
Bound to my heart my a far higher worth 
Than all I find in the din of the rabble, 
Crazed with its race for the gaining of gold. 
Wild with the noise of its incessant babble — 
Type of the heathenish Babel of old ! 



94 THE OREGONIAN. 

One with my soul is the rush of the torrent 
Tearing its course down precipitant deeps ! 
Even the rattle of reptile abhorrent 
Blends with the bird-song, and harmony keeps ! 
Room for the soul's broad expansion is 'round me, 
Room for the sympathies tethered in town ; 
Here can I break all the fetters that bound me, 
Cast all society's heresies down ! 

Nature is mine with its beautiful sweetness — 

Laughter of winds in the lightness of Spring; 

Glory of flow'rs in radiant completeness ; 

Canons and clefts where the wild echoes ring; 

Waterfalls gleaming with hues iridescent, 

Swirling in thunderous vehemence by; 

Snow-peaks that lift to the moon's pearly crescent, 

Piercing the blue of the luminous sky ; 

Flight of the vulture that airily poises 

Eager to sweep on its quarry afar : 

Insects that utter their petulant noises 

Far better these to my heart than the jar 

And turbulent warfare of wild crowded places 

Knowing no God but the God of base gain ! 



THE OREGONIAN. 95 

Tricked by the glamour of deceiving faces, 
Filled with the spectres of want and of pain ! 
Oh, for the rare fragrant breath of the prairie 
Bearing the scent of the long waving grass ! 
Oh, for the bright plumed birds ! And the airy 
Voice of the pines, and the rivers, like glass, 
Sweeping majestical, silvery-winding, 
Onward, still onward, and evermore finding 
Gorgeous magnificence over them bending, 
Gold of the sunlight and silver of starlight 
Evermore blending and unto them lending 
The power and grandeur that live not in Art 
But only are born out of wild Nature's heart 
Their beauty, their gladness, their rest to impart ! 

Mine be the serpent that slips thro' the sand, 
With sinous sliding, and malignant glance ; 
Mine be the cyclone fierce, mighty and grand, 
For in its fury one has half a chance! 
Give me the grizzly, tremendous of paw. 
Rather the vulture, the sleek lizard's jaw — 
Aye, rather these than the scandal and spite 
The spleen and the jeer of the opulent crowd, 



96 THE OREGONIAN. 

The way of the world that has made Mammon might, 

And utters its sophistries blatant and loud ! 

At least I have rest from the long, hopeless quest 

Of a love that can never — ah ! never be mine ! 

There is rest in the rill, and the pines of the hill, 

In the lone, brilliant stars, and the moon's placent shine ! 

There is peace in the sound of the wild waterfall 

That bloweth its trumpet on storm-jagged steep 

To summon the echoes of yon caiion's wall, 

And, like tangled silver, then headlong to leap ! 

There is joy for the heart that can hope nevermore, 

Forsaken by Love in the days passed away ; 

For Nature alone can its calmness restore, 

And teach it to hold taunting Mem'ry at bay ! 

Why utter the story of one all untrue — 

Of Love's tender vows in their holiness shattered? 

The severance bitter, the scornful adieu, 

The jewels of confidence thus rudely scattered ! 

I meet no rebuff in the elements near me; 

The wild creatures slink from my pathway and fear me ; 

To me they are harmless, and bear me no scorn, 

Fit comrades are they for hearts hopeless, forlorn! 



THE OREGONIAN. 97 

Rich butterflies, like gaudy flowers awing, 
Amid tangled vines gayly hover and swing; 
Close hid, the panther crouched low on the branch 
Waits but to fall, like a fierce avalanche ! 
Sunning itself in the bright, blinding glare 
Of noontide the rattler Hes coiled in the sand; 
And songs of the birds on the bloom-scented air 
I hear, like the echoes from far fairy-land ! 
The river my comrade is, restlessly flowing, 
On\yard, still onward, in broadening view, 
Beauty and charm to the wildwoods bestowing, 
Mirroring stars in their eloquent glowing. 
Mirroring heaven translucently blue, 
Lulling to quiet my heart in its passion, 
Soothing its anguish, it still is a friend ; 
But, when the lash of the storm bids it dash on, 
Sweeping its banks with a boundless unrest, 
Bearing its rage and its hate in its breast. 
Showing its fangs in the white of each crest. 
Wild in its anger the forest to rend — 
Then is my heart with its infinite yearning 
One with the river, all passionate, spurning 
Human control, with a deej) inward burning, 



98 THE OREGONIAN. 

Filled witli a scorn that seenis never to end! 

Scorn of the love that was falser than human! 

Scorn of the vows of a false-hearted woman ! 

Kinder the flame of the red lightning's stroke 

Rending the heart of the huge forest oak ! 

Aye, far more merciful were the cyclone 

Sweeping destruction o'er circle or zone, 

Dashing its way with an uncontrolled ire, 

Swift as the wings of a whirlwind-lashed fire; 

Kinder, more merciful these than the love 

Slighted and scorned; for the angels above 

And the demons below must with pity condemn 

The heart that would barter the rare, priceless gem 

Of affection, so full of a richness untold — 

Aye, barter it all for a handful of gold ! 

I wonder if now in that city afar, 

The whirl of its crowds, and the tumult and jar, 

Her heart hath forgotten the vows that we plighted? 

The night at the porch by the stars dimly lighted? 

The winds soft and low, and the roses asleep? 

The nightingale trilling its cadences deep? 

I see the rich hue of her cheeks all aglow; 

1 touch her warm hand, small, and white as the snow 



THE OREGONIAN. 99 

That gleams to the stars on yon peaks far away ; 
And my heart reads the words that her eyes mutely 

say! 
Oh, the world then to me was a Paradise rare, 
And she was its Eve in her loveliness fair ! 
But the serpent came early the joy to despoil. 
The glamor of beauty to wither and soil, 
And leave in its place but a heart-blighting care 
To follow my life with its burden and toil ! 

One night — I had been on the trail since morn — 

I was weary, dejected and sadly forlorn — 

(Ere the sweet love of Nature was in my soul born, 

And Fd learned its philosophy, tender, consoling, 

The delicate harp-strings of life all controlling, 

And blending in harmony discords of Time 

In one peerless song, rare, ecstatic, sublime !) 

I mused in my hammock ; the night's deepening shade 

Hung heavy o'er ravine and river and glade ; 

And, like the low rumble of hoofs on the plain, 

I heard the deep thunder presaging the rain, 

The pines wildly writhing like giants in pain ! 

A face, white with anger and terror, appeared — 



100 THE OREGONIAN. 

The eyes glared upon me as if they still feared 

A living resentment that would not be hushed ! 

The blood of a wound from her heart madly gushed ! 

'Twas she — and she reached out her hand to me there — 

And said in a voice that was wild with despair : 

''Forgive me ! Forgive me ! I cast Love away — 

I saw all its roses in brightness decay, 

And Life with me since has been bitter dismay !" 

I strove to arise ; but my limbs were like lead, 

I tried hard to speak ; but words none I said ! 

She knelt at my side pleading thro' blinding tears. 

And told me the story of sad, loveless years. 

But still I replied not, my tears would not flow ; 

I laughed at the words of her pitiful woe ! 

For had I not sufifered, unpitied for years? 

Could this be assuaged by a false woman's tears? 

She clung to me there in her anguish supreme, 

And, by the swift glare of the lightning's sharp gleam, 

I saw a face pallid and deep-lined with pain — 

(Oh, God! that J ever should see it again!) 

She told me of long years of bitterness spent. 

And begged that my heart would its anger relent ; 



THE OREGONIAN. 101 

She spoke of the days ere her promise was broken ; 
She showed me a withered rose — Love's early token, 
And pictured the Past and the beautiful years 
With eloquent yearnings and passionate tears ; 
The porch ; and the old trysting place in the dell ; 
The lane, and the scenes that my heart knew so well ; 
Her fair Northern home with sweet woodbine em- 
bowered, 
Its garden, its meadows with daisies o'erflowered. 
I saw, yes, and yonder the school on the hill ! 
I heard once again the harsh whir of the mill 
Where as fair childish sweethearts we loitered to see 
The dash of the waters that swept by in glee. 
But what was her anguish, her pleading to me? 
For had I not suffered since that f ar-ofif day ? 
And had not my current of Life turned away 
From all joys it knew and their beauty and sweetness, 
From Hope's lovely dream and its fruitful complete- 
ness ? 
And all for her sake and her false, wilful pride 
That thrust me an outcast so far from her side. 
And turned unto gall the sweet cup of pure love, 
Yea, changed to fierce hate the content of the dove ! 



102 THE OREGONIAN. 

I spurned her, I say, with a strong man's fierce wrath ! 

I bade her begone — no more darken my path. 

For the tempest without could not equal the might 

Of that in my heart at her terrible sight, 

And he thought of the life she had come but to blight ! 

With a crash that resounded from cavern to peak, 

And a glare, as if risen from Hell's awful deeps — 

(Or the red of a flame as in fury it sweeps 

O'er the prairie) — she turned then to speak: 

And I woke from the clutch of a horrible dream ! 

She had fled ; and I saw in the last lurid gleam 

The eyes of a serpent that crawled at my feet, 

To me and my cabin companion more meet 

Than the woman who vowed to be mine long ago, 

But whose vows were as light as the sun-lighted snow 

That melts into tears in the mild spring-time breeze; 

Yea, as trustful as waves of the treacherous seas ! 

Then I saw the first glimmer of dawn in the skies 

Rose-tinting the mountains that 'round me arise, 

And purpling the caverns and pine-covered hills 

And spreading its glories o'er rivers and rills, 

Like the blessing of God on his handwork below 

O'er the land that had nothing to do with Life's woe ! 



THE OREGONIAN. 103 

And I thanked Him for being, and strength to live on 

For the grandeur of all these eyes rested upon ! 

For the nights of the keen orbs that spangled His 

throne, 
For the deeps of the canons reverberant, lone. 
For the mountains that up, up in majesty rear 
Till they pierce through the clouds to the luminous, 

clear. 
Azure space far beyond; and the glitter and glow 
Of the stars softly fall on their manes white with 

snow ! 
And I thanked Him again for the pathways I trod, 
Where the human within me was kindred with God ! 
For what is the Orient o'er seas of blue 
With the languor of palms dripping spice-laden dew — 
Mosques and minarets stretching away to the skies, 
And its blossoms and flowers of infinite dyes. 
Or its maidens with night in their soft, melting eyes? 
Have I not in the breath of the pines o'er my head 
All the sweets, the delights ever Paradise shed? 
And the lessons of mountains here lifting my soul, 
With the language of rivers that ceaselessly roll. 
Rushing onward and on to the far-away goal 1 



104 THE OREGONIAN. 

Why for Eastern delights should my restless Lean 

sigh? 
Here dwelleth all joys that the earth can supply. 
In the open for me is the heart's pure desire, 
With a room for content, and a sphere to aspire ! 
On the trail, in the round up of cattle, I sing, 
With the lariat unleashed, like a bird on the wing ! 
Here, alone, I am lord, in my freedom a King! 
There is joy in the watch of the herd 'mid the night 
When the stir of the wind sets them often in flight, 
And the clash of the horns, and the billowy sweep 
Of the dark, huddled throng echoes harshly and deep ; 
And I gallop along while my broncho I spur, 
'Mid the wild ever-echoing tramping and whir 
Till the leaders I head in precipitate flight — 
There is joy in it all and a wondrous delight ! 
So why should I sigh for the dazzle and glare 
Of the city, and all that most men deem so fair. 
When I know 'tis a world of delusion and snare, 
Of crime and pretense, and of scandal and wrong, 
Where the soul is oft bartered for gold, and the poor 
Have Miserys' lot evermore to endure? 
And why should I care for a love that is lost? 



< 

THE OREGONIAN. 105 



I have counted the gains of it all, and the cost! 

I have known the deceit that can lurk in bright eyes, 

The sting of false hearts I have learned to despise. 

All is vanity there ; but I breathe here the Truth 

in broad Nature's domain of perennial youth ! 

There is pleasure for me in the green dewy blade, 

In the trees and the flowers of valley and glade ; 

The deeps of the blue sky, and the songs of the birds ; 

Day's dawn ; and the noontide of quivering heat, 

And the sound of the heart-thrilling echoing beat 

Of the steed as it rushes away o'er the plain. 

The' often at night but the limitless sky 

Is roof of the spot where I wearily lie, 

I am happier far than if sheltered with pride 

In a palace where Untruth and Envy abide 

With its mates of Hypocrisy, Falseness and Wrong, 

And the glamor of riches cast over the throng! 

So mine be the mountains that climb to the stars, 

The gulches, the canons that carry the scars 

Of the Ages deep-lined in their adamant breasts ; 

The peaks with the snow on their high-lifted crests, 

The grandeur, the beauty, the sweet, boundless peace 

That give to the spirit of sorrow surcease ! 



106 THE OREGONIAN. 

So live I : and when to my rest I shall go, 

My grave be the prairie, where winds breathing low 

Shall sing me a requiem tender and soft, 

And yonder deep caverns that tower aloft 

My monument be till the great Judgment day 

When the earth and its wrongs have all passed away ! 



THE CLIMBER 



"Say no more!" the goatherd cried, 
"Your siren darts fall pointless here. 
I will go on, Ambition calls; 
Tho' avalanches bar my way 
I will go onf 



The Climber 

A wandering goatherd in the streets 
Of far-off Alpine village stood, 
And saw draw near a chariot 
Of gold and crystal wondrous fair. 
Upon it, lashing foam-white steeds 
To frantic speed, the rider stood, 
Uncaring for the multitude 
Of throngs, all ages and all trades 
And ways of Life. 

There sat within, 
On crimson velvet seat, a Maid 
Of grace and beauty marvellous ! 
All eyes were turned, all hands were raised 
Towards her now beseechingly. 
And voices wild for favors plead. 
Full many trampled were beneath 
The prancing hoof-beats of the .steeds. 
Or crushed under the grinding wheels ! 
For sage divines ; the poor, the rich ; 
The young, the man of four score years ; 
The student, and professors wise — 



112 THE CLIMBER. 

All madly rushed towards the Maid, 

With outstretched arms, to win her smiles ! 

But calmly sat she, with a face 

Impassive as those mountain peaks, 

With naught of recognition there, 

Tho' the way was wet with blood and tears, 

And strewn with myriad broken hearts! 

The simple goatherd marvelled much 

To see this Maid so passing fair. 

Was she a Princess from afar? 

For the slaves of Toil a Joan of Arc? 

A Queen of Song to glad their hearts 

And thrill? Or fairy with rich gifts? 

He turned him to a veteran gray 

All bent and worn and bullet-scarred 

And him bespoke : 

"Who is this Maid 
Who rules all hearts with queenly sway ?" 
His withered hand the veteran laid 
Upon the goatherd's arm, and said 
With voice of treble, child-like tones: 
"This is the Maid for whom the world 
Doth sigh, and many perish still — 



THE CLIMBER. 113 

Have perished since the world began ! 

Old, young, weak, strong, humble and great, 

Rich, sinner, priest, and potentate, 

The fool, the sage her votaries are ! 

Happy, yet wretched is the life 

Who basks within her witching smiles, 

And on her passionate kisses feeds ! 

But once a year this way she comes 

Bestowing favors on the few !" 

E'en as he spake the chariot stopped, 

The Maid alighted, and the throng 

Fell back in awe — made opening wide 

Of avenue, thro' which she passed. 

Up to the startled goatherd she 

All smiling, came, and straightway threw 

Her arms about his sun-bronzed neck, 

And pressed upon his trembling lips 

Her burning kisses ! Mad with joy, 

He begged her never to depart, 

But evermore his star to be 

Amid the storms and ills of Life! 

She whispered something to him then, 

And, entering her chariot swift, 



114 THE CLIMBER. 

Sped on her way, amid the sighs 
Of throngs of disappointed hearts! 
Envied by all, the goatherd stood 
And heard the shouts of bitter rage 
That 'round him beat. 

"To think," they cried 
"That she hath showered favors on 
This ragged toiler of the hills. 
While many are far worthier here !" 
But he heeded not the furious speech, 
And taking up his daily task, 
With hope renewed, he wandered on. 
The birds to him sang carols sweet ; 
And flowers nodded on his path, 
Scattering fragrance o'er his way 
Yet in the midst of his delight 
A shadow fell athwart his heart ! 
Oft in his toil he paused to brush 
The sweat that gathered from his brow— 
A string of sparkling, silver beads — 
For he was musing of the one 
Who sat within the chariot fair — • 
Her eyes, like brilliant stolen stars 



THE CLIMBER. 115 

Of Paradise! He felt again 

Her maddened kisses thrill his blood 

With fires of Love; those downy arms — 

Soft pillows of the Seraphim! 

Would that he might once more repose 

Upon her bosom, and expire! 

Then would he to his task repair, 

While the hours crept by with feet of lead ! 

Anon he turned imploring eyes 

To peaks against the steel blue dome, 

That towered like vast, cathedral walls; 

Like monuments of Gods of old ! 

Or like the fangs, in jagged row, 

Of fabled monsters of the Past! 

Or thoughts of Genius soaring high! 

Or giants garbed in silver robes 

With fringes of the eternal snow! 

Wild torrents thundered deep below 

With eloquence that fiercely poured 

Thro' tunnels of the mountain's heart. 

With gathered fury, leashed, in view 

Crouched avalanches everywhere — 

White dragons of fair Switzerland! 



116 THE CLIMBER. 

Great lakes that mirrored Alpine skies 
And all their stars of sparking rays — 
The eyes of Angels ! Swift cascades 
Adown the craggy steps out-leapt, 
With silvery feet, and dark green pines 
Seemed armor-clad for battle dire 
With ice-armed legions everywhere! 
Deep glaciers gleamed in every pass; 
And silver-arrowed rivers sped 
Upon their flight ! 

Like emerald wreaths 
The valleys twined around the scene, 
And sounds of tinkling bells were heard 
Floating on pinions of the air! 
The chamois flashed across the sea ; 
And music of the huntsman's horn 
Came to the ear of shepherd lone 
Tending his flock of bleating sheep ; 
While the last rays of the dying sun 
Tinted the floating clouds with lights 
Of purple, rose and amber gold. 
The land of Freedom — Switzerland^ — 
Unrolled its beauty to his eyes ! 



THE CLIMBER. 1 1 7 

Long gazed he on the marvellous realm. 
These peaks seemed mighty problems high 
Upon the varied paths of Life, 
And beyond them he would, searching, find 
The secret haunts of fair Romance! 
Mayhap, the Chariot-Maid was there ! 
Would he attempt the heights to scale? 
Perchance when he had bravely won 
A foothold on their arduous side — 
Conquered each obstacle, and reached 
The highest peak, might he not find 
An icy wilderness — no more — 
Instead of trace of her he loved? 

The sun poured down its store of gold ; 

It was a day of Alpine calm 

And beauty. To his view there came 

The shadow of a human form. 

The stranger paused ; upon his brow 

Were waving locks of iron-gray 

That fell on shoulders broadly made ; 

His lips were pale, and firm compressed ; 

His raven-black, and piercing eyes 



118 THE CLIMBER. 

Peered from their bushy eye-brows 

On the goatherd who stood wondering nigh. 

The iron hand of Time had left 

Its marks upon the stranger's face, 

Yet fire still blazed within those eyes, 

As if of will unconquerable! 

"Still dreaming, lad," he softly said 
Of the world afar and its delights. 
Of dazzling charms of one sweet maid? 
Why should you climb ? Nigh all the world 
Is with you in your airy task! 
Yours are but dreams, fair, idle dreams, 
That melt, like rainbows in the sky! 
When man meets me real Life begins. 
For I have crossed the giddy heights. 
And knowledge have of her you love! 
I knew your secret — read your heart — 
From the first moment that we met ! 
I know where you may find the Maid 
If heart of yours is strong as steel ! 
I'll point the way that you must take — 
I am the traveller of roads, 



THE CLIMBER. 119 

And know the best and surest paths. 

Yet Pilgrims tremble when I'm near! 

I build the gorges, giant-mouthed, 

The dizzy precipices vast 

That must be crossed ere one can gain 

The glowing wreathlet of Success ! 

I plant the trees — the sharp-teethed rocks 

On paths that otherwise were smooth. 

Who conquers these his Life shall be 

One dazzling dream of Fairyland ! 

The road that leads to the palace bright 

Of the Maid you love is crowned with peaks 

That pierce the realms of vapid clouds 

Where Death doth lurk in every step ! 

Dare you attempt? If you succeed, 

The Maid you love you then shall wed ! 

But should you fail, you must return 

To Mother Earth — to nourish her — 

In some new form of life to rise !" 

The stranger spoke and disappeared. 

"Be it so then !" the goatherd cried, 
"I'll follow on the toilsome trail ! 



20 . THE CLIMBER. 

ril find the Maid I madly love!" 

But in his brain what thoughts arose? 

The Past — its hours of mystery — 

The Future and its roseate Hopes — 

The Present and its trials grim. 

But mused he : "Thus are heroes made ! 

When here the battle's roar had ceased, 

And the footsteps of the Legions vast 

Of bold imperious Ceasar died 

Away from grand Helvetia old, 

At Riith three from the Cantons met 

And swore beneath these Alpine skies 

To die in their dear Land's defence ! 

To burst the. chains of Tyranny ! 

To drive the power of Austria 

Hence, like the leaves before the blast ! 

These heroes were ! Their names outshine 

Like brilliant stars of Hope and Faith 

To the weary Pilgrims of the earth !" 

All day he strode still on; but now, 

With quickened pace, his heart was thrilled 

With sacred fire. 

Lake Constance shone 



THE CLIMBER. 121 

Before his sight ; the moonbeams fell, 
In dreamy silver, o'er its breast! 
He bent to hear while whispering waves 
Told of the mighty days of old 
When forests which its strand adorned 
Were peopled with the startled stag — 
Were ringing with the Roman shouts ! 
But now his thoughts were not of these. 
In reverie, far-oflf was he! 
At Schaffhausen that quaint old town, 
Set in the Twentieth Century's lap, 
Of oriel windows, gables gray, 
No rock nor barrier crossed his path. 
But, to the South, the glittering towers 
Of rugged mountains lifted high. 
There lay the pathway to his goal — 
There dwelt the Angel of his dreams ! 
Onward ! While clouds, like argent Isles, 
Lay in the upper deep of blue. 
Lake Wallenstadt slumbered within 
Its rocky bed. Sudden he heard 
The roar of conflict near at hand ; 
And at the advancing host of Knights 



122 THE CLIMBER. 

A handful of brave shepherds hurled 

Down giant rocks ! 

For hours the strife 

Raged on. Like thunderbolts swift crashed 

Huge boulders hurling instant death ! 

Those shepherds' valor conquered here ! 

And Knights of Gold were vanquished by 

The muscles of the sons of Toil ! 

Still on he went, and down the vale 

He saw an armored knight, with sword 

Poised o'er a shepherd at his feet. 

The goatherd rushed upon him there 

With well aimed blow of oaken club 

And dashed the knight to gory death ! 

He knelt to dress the shepherd's wounds, 

Who cursed him that he killed the knight. 

For said he: "Soon my soul would be 

Within the Palace fair of Fame !" 

Still, as he dressed the shepherd's wounds, 

He murmured : ''Will this be my Fate ?" 

'Twas but a vision of the Past! 

Within the vale of Engadine 

He stood, where mountain giants shone 



THE CLIMBER. 123 

In regal glory! Rivers flashed 

Like steel swords, thro' the leafy trees. 

The sun stood with its feet of gold 

Upon the peaks, and cascades leapt, 

And sang their roundelays of joy ! 

He peered adown amid the trees 

Where mountains mirrored rugged heads 

Upon Lake Maggiore's breait. 

Where bright blue skies forever hang 

O'er dreamy Lake Lugano while 

The sun-kissed breath of Italy 

Sweeps o'er its bosom. 

Then he turned. 
His heart with gloomy sadness bowed. 
For seemed he lost, as in a maze ! 
Oh, for one star from out the Heaven 
Of Thought to guide him to the shrine 
Of yonder Goddess of his heart ! 
On ! On ! with face set to the North 
He sped, and crossed a rugged hill ; 
Where the women, strangely beautiful. 
Beckoned to him, by Zurich's Lake 
And sought with siren voices to woo 



124 THE CLIMBER. 

Him to their arms ! 

With fond delight 
He gazed upon enchanting charms, 
And willed to throw him at their feet, 
Forever there in bliss to be ! 
But, hark! the roar of battle rolled, 
*Mid the roads of winds invisible. 
Rushing in madness to his ears ! 
It called him to be present there! 
It stirred his heart, and urged him on 
To join the struggle, and he fled, 
Waving the women his adieu ! 
At Sempach, in the narrow pass, 
The tide of battle halted. Here 
The heroic Swiss had humbled now 
The flower of Austria's chivalry. 
Like tigers watched they, either foe. 
Gathering muscles for the fray — 
Muscles of steel and adamant! 
To Death or triumph now to haste. 
The Swiss crouched in the narrow pass. 
Like statues of Defiance! 

The Austrians came, 



THE CLIMBER. 125 

Like massive waves ! 

'Twas there, and then, 
A peasant hero boldly stood 
Within the awful jaws of Death ! 
Then rushed he forward, gathering 
Within his breast the awful spears, 
And perished at the f oemen's feet ; 
Yet shook their lines, slow- wavering, 
Until they all were put to flight ! 
Oh, glorious example thine. 
Brave Arnold Von Winkelreid ! 
As the sun shone o'er this battlefield 
The goatherd saw the Maid so fair — 
Heart of his heart! She placed a wreath 
Oji Unter Walden's hero's brow ! 
And uttering a cry of joy 
He rushed to meet her ; but she fled ! 
"At last !" cried he, "the road I see ! 
Foot-sore and weary tho' I plod, 
I near the goal of heart's desire!" 
Still toiling on, a maids he met 
Enveloped in a robe of charms. 
She was indeed a vision bright! 



26 THE CLIMBER. 

She sang rare songs of beauty sweet, 
With voice that thrilled, like magic, thro' 
His soul. His heart was soon ensnared 
In the web of melody she wove ! 
"Madman!" she cried, "no further go! 
Here ever pause 'mid glittering joys. 
Tempt Fate no more! Your mission vain 
Is known to me. Ambition's road 
Is strewn with bleeding, broken hearts ! 
Tho' thousands perish, still they come ! 
Ah, few indeed who reach the goal ! 
Fleeting the smiles of her you seek, 
Elusive as the lightning's flash ! 
And even if you do succeed 
And reach her palace — even then 
The struggle is but just begun — 
'Tis vain to hold your footing there ! 
Turn, turn aside, nor sap your strength ! 
The brilliant mirror of your dreams 
I'll shatter. Come, and follow me ! 
I'll lead you to a haunt among 
The crystal hills, where snow-white doves 
And robins coo and warble sweet 



THE CLIMBER. 127 

The happy songs of radiant dreams ! 
On balmy nights we two can sit 
On a rustic bench, by a silvery brook, 
And drink in the music of dear Love! 
Where never worldling's sigh can come. 
From gardens of delight I'll cull 
The brightest flowers for you alone !" 
''Oh! say no more!" the goatherd cried, 
''Your siren darts falls pointless here. 
I will go on, Ambition calls ; 
Tho' avalanches bar my way 
I will go on! The flowers of Love 
And Beauty which you offer me 
Will fade before the morrow's sun ! 
Already they in throes of Death ! 
How could I wear them on my breast. 
Where Life throbs warm and fast? 

'Twere best 
To leave them in the garden fair 
With their companions ; sacred they 
Even as our lives sacred are !" 
He turned; his journey to resume; 
The battle won, renewed was he 



28 THE CLIMBER. 

In strength and vigor of the heart 

Where the glorious Staubbach tumbles down 

O'er wildest crags, in silvery showers, 

All fringed with people, green and gold, 

Where liquid, blazing diamonds gleam, 

All bruised and torn he wandered on. 

He stretched his trembhng, bleeding hands 

And plucked a brilliant gem from out 

St. Gothard's crown, at peril dear 

Of his whole life ! The first of gems 

That he had found since he set out ! 

Oh, what a treasure 'twas to him ! 

For hours he gazed and gloated there 

On the seraphic fires of its soul ! 

He heard its melodious murmuring : 

"Oh, Paradise and all its joys 

Are dwelling here within this gem!" 

The lordly Rhine was at his feet, 

And following, like fiery youth, 

It rushed by huts and hamlets, till 

'Twas lost among the city's walls, 

Leaving him with his Reveries. 



THE CLIMBER. 129 

He saw armed Knights of Tyranny, 

Who bowed the hearts of men to dust ! 

And soon they melted far away, 

Like dew before the morning sun. 

For a terriffic storm arose. 

And when it ceased, the sunshine burst 

Thro' the roof of clouds, a waterfall 

Of gold; and lo! brave William Tell 

Stood o'er the dying Gessler there 

And Liberty was glorified, 

And Tyranny was dashed to earth ! 

And still the goatherd wandered on, 
With bleeding feet and weary heart. 
Where the silver crowned Alps uprose, 
By emerald pastures, countless flocks, 
And sun-kissed landscapes 'neath the blue. 
He stopped to rest beside Lausanne 
Where walked the Kings of earth, and where 
Lived monarchs of the world of Thought — 
Voltaire and Gibbon and Rousseau ! 
He struggled by the mighty Rhone 
That like an arrow rushes thro' 



130 THE CLIMBER. 

This wonderland of Nature's realm, 
Past glaciers and mountains huge. 
Past great St. Bernard, where the hosts 
Of grand Napoleon looked down ! 
Mont Blanc, the goatherd gazed upon, 
Its glittering helmet towering high 
Above its army of giants near! 
"So will I tower !" the climber cried, 
"Above the burdens that I bear!" 
Bleeding and bruised, still on and on 
He struggled o'er the toilsome path, 
And then he saw hundreds of skulls 
About him strewn, and from a cave, 
A giant came who bore a shield. 
There was one path which onward led 
Beside the giant's horrid den. 
Towards the enemy he came 
No thought of fear in his brave soul. 
The giant's name was Ignorance; 
A gem flashed on his mighty breast. 
The goatherd willed it to possess 
This gem at any cost! His sword . 
He drew as he advanced. The fight 



THE CLIMBER. 13 

For hours raged with furious might. 
But 'neath the giant's cruel blows 
The goatherd, fainting, gasping, fell ! 

The earth, the mountains and the sky 
All whirling seemed ; the torrents roared 
Within his ears ! 

He looked up then 
And saw the soft sky bending o'er ; 
While stood the giant near his den. 
By the fallen sat a blue-eyed maid 
With a winning smile and wooing voice, 
Who pleaded his sad wounds to dress. 
"No!" cried he. "This would comfort bring, 
And sweet repose; but I was born 
For trials and for battle-strife !" 
Slowly he rose unto his feet, 
With sword in hand. The maiden turned 
Aside and wept. The giant quick 
The fight renewed with fury dire; 
But soon the unequal combat ends ; 
The strength of Desperation drove 
The goatherd's sword within the heart 



132 THE CLIMBER. 

Of that fell monster to the hilt, 

And the goatherd tore the precious gem 

From the gory, cleft and quivering breast ! 

"At last ! At last !" the goatherd cried, 
"I am upon the right road now!'' 
Emerging from his shelter, he 
Exposed was to the golden glare 
Of sunlight, and grew faint and wan. 
Two maids of beauty came to him. 
"Pilgrim," they said, "your days are few, 
For time, the sculptor, has upon 
Your brow carved wrinkles. You are old, 
Your hair is white, your eyes are dimmed, 
And worn and bent, you cannot live 
In this fierce light that on you shines ! 
Unto the gardens fair of Peace, 
Pleasure and Comfort come with us ! 
Enjoy the hours that yet remain." 
He yielded, too weak to resist ; 
And slowly they led him away. 
Then thro' the garden's open gate<^ 
He saw the marble fountains play. 



THE CLIMBER. 1 33 

With many tinted waters rich. 
Couches of velvet and of gold 
On which the forms of maids reclined 
Were near; sweet music stole upon 
The perfumed air ; rare flowers bloomed 
Intoxicating with their scent. 
"Surely," said he, " 'tis Paradise! 
Here will I rest in happiness 
For evermore !" 

But as he paused, 
About to enter this domain, 
A feeling strange rushed thro' his heart, 
The counterpart of what he felt 
When kissed by his fair chariot Maid! 
The fires of courage and of strength 
That feeling strange again renewed. 
With a wild cry he cast aside 
The lovely sylphs, and turned away, 
ToiHng still up the mountain's side ! 
Below him echoed far and wide 
The terror-stricken cry that rose: 
**No further, weary Pilgrim go! 
Beware the crashing avalanche!" 



134 THE CLIMBER. 

At last his feet had gained the top 
Of highest mountains, and he paused 
To rest, for he was sore opprest. 
Alas! the air was hard to breathe, 
And fiercest vultures hovered 'round ! 
So hot the glare of noonday sun 
He longed to be in pastures mild 
Among the flock he dearly loved ! 

As he turned to view the scene around 
A vision burst upon his sight. 
To him it looked a picture bright 
Torn from the walls of Eden's sphere! 
A palace built of sapphires rare 
And rubies — 'twas the dome of Fame ! 
"At last! at last!" he wildly cried, 
"The goal is near for which I've toiled! 
Within the arms of her I love, 
Yes, madly love, I soon shall rest !" 
Sweet, silver bells rang from the towers, 
And long processions sought its doors. 
As he approached, chains rattled loud; 
The swinging draw-bridge lifted was ; 



THE CLIMBER. 1 35 

The Warder of the towers cried out : 
*Too late ! the Maid you seek is Fame ! 
She's wedded to a friend of yours — 
The butcher's son of far-oflF Bern !" 

The goatherd staggered to a rest 
On rustic bench. His breath and blood 
Seemed leaving him at this fell blow ! 
"The butcher's son," he laughed aloud, 
That good-for-nothing, drunken elf! 
The scorn and jeer of all the town!" 
Thus he bemoaned his hapless lot, 
His breath and soul melting away. 

The Warder spoke : "Some travellers find 

The journey easy, while some toil 

And in a Life ne'er reach their goal ! 

Fame is as tickle as the flash 

Of lightning, tho' it shines on all 

It strikes but few, and those few die 

In the golden tangles of its web ! 

Far better 'tis to lowly live, 

Like humble beasts, in pastures green, 

Than be a strong man seeking Fame ! 



136 THE CLIMBER. 

For when the eyelids of the day 

Are closed, the beasts to slumber go, 

And have no dreams till day arise. 

What care they for the busy world? 

Better to be like these than sigh 

For bubbles of the Goddess Fame ! 

Frail as fair lies on Beauty's lips ! 

Where is thy gain ? Return ! Return ! 

Oh, stranger, downcast, turn they steps ! 

Go ! be a beacon 'mid the dark 

For Folly to take warning by !" 

The goatherd sank in mute despair. 

Then plunged him from the mountain's side ! 

A poor, dwarfed fir-tree stayed his fall. 

And held him in its rugged arms. 

For hours he lay in its embrace, 

Then, strength returned, he started up 

The mountain's path defiantly. 

Determined not to know defeat ! 

Hark! what mighty sound was heard? 

A roar, like thunder, shook the air ! 

Oh, horror! it was the avalanche 

The white dragon of Switzerland ! 



THE CLIMBER. 137 

Adown the mountain's side it rushed, 
While the air was filled with broken trees, 
And wayside cabins, and huge rocks. 
Ah! what its fury could withstand? 
No army would dare cross its path ! 
Down, down, it came, and to his death 
It hurled the goatherd in its icy arms ! 
While far above the vulture sailed 
In glee ; and a million tiny suns 
Were gleaming in the Alpine sky ! 



THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE 



A carven arrow's head once bore 
This legend of the days of yore, 
From wide-spread pampas to my door; 
So, hear me tell it. 



ine Legend of the Argentine 

A carven arrow's head once bore 
This legend of the days of yore, 
From wide-spread pampas to my door; 
So, hear me tell it. 

Long buried was this arrow's head 
Where reaches of deep green outspread, 
Beneath a turquoise sky, so fair. 
That paradise seemed mirrored there, 
Stretched to the Andes far away: 
This tale of Love it breathes to-day, 
And what befell it. 

Ere the white man's conquering horde 
Trod those pampas wild and broad; 
When the condor's mighty wings 
Swept these mountain openings, 
Poising over caverns vast 
On which never had been cast 
Eye of m6rtal ; ere these caves 
Had become the silent graves 
Of the dwellers of the rocks 



144 THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 

Cleft and crumbling with the shocks 

Of the tempest and the storm 

Hurled when loomed the earthquake's form, 

Shattering with giant hands 

These primeval mountain lands. 

Delving awful deeps where Fear 

Ever since has hovered near — 

Ere this time a savage race 

Made these plains a dwelling place. 

Strong of limb, bronze-brown of hue, 

Valiant, and of purpose true ; 

In the chase of eagle flight. 

Brave and crafty in the fight ; 

Bold of heart, to fear a stranger. 

Morn would see the savage ranger 

Speeding o'er the plains in battle, 

With a foeman's ire aglow, 
Nerved on by the war-drum's rattle, 

Armed and eager for the foe! 
Noon, beneath the palms o'erspreading, 
Shade and sweet contentment shedding, 
Saw the maidens coyly gathered 

In a circle bright and fair, 



THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 145 

With their garments gaily feathered — 
Plumage varied, rich and rare. 
Ah, for lovers then they waited. 

Hastening from battle dire ! 
On their prowess contemplated, 

Eager for their heart's desire ! 
Twilight, with its purple wings, 

Over them made shadows deep : 
Where the tangled foliage swung, 
And the vine in clusters clung. 

Nature wooed to trancjuil sleep 
Pampas, hill and wooded steep. 
Then crept stealthily from lair 
Beasts that shunned the daylight fair. 
Slid the lizard thro' the leaves, 
Where the noisome spider weaves ; 
Twined the snake on dewy trees 
Motionless on moonlit leas. 
From his huge and horrid den 
Strode the fierce gorilla then. 
Making hideous with his cry 
Every region 'neath the sky 
That his lungs of brass could reach 



146 THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 

With reverberated screech! 
While the cougar, from the Hmb, 
Crouched, and darted on the dim 
Covert of the Night, his stare 
From two eyes with rage a-glare ! 
Yet from the forest and the plain, 
And from the Andes to the main, 
Along the Orinoco's sweep 
There spread no terror half so deep, 
No fear like that this monster brought 
Thro' deeds of cruel vengeance wrought 
On those who ventured on his path 
And met the demons of his wrath ! 
Half man, half devil! horror vile! 
No Caliban from Fancy's Isle 
So fierce, so unrelenting, foul, 
As he that bore the hideous scowl 
Of a malignant, deathless hate 
T'wards all God's creatures animate! 



Brave was the Chief in the pride of his youth, 
Child of a sire who had long passed away ; 



THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 147 

Fair was the maiden in whose eyes the truth 

Shone as the dew on the liUes of May! 
Sweet was the love that was phghted at eve 

Under the stars that were dustering bright; 
Lone was the heart that was destined to grieve, 

Steeped in the darkness of Misery's night ! 
Often they wandered beside the clear stream, 

Often it listened to vows that they told; 
Love held their souls in its beautiful dream — 

Love that in spite of Time never grows old ! 
He was her pride for his valor and fame ; 

She was his idol of grace past compare ; 
Joy of his heart, like a spirit she came 

Bringing to him all things lovely and fair ! 
Soon were their lives to be wedded with joy. 

Like mountain torrents that meet on the plain ! 
Joined with a passion that naught could destroy — 

Fraught not with shadows of sorrow or pain. 
Nature's sweet children they were, in its prime, 

Free and untrammeled by Fashion or Art; 
Love knows no season, and Love knows no Time ; 

Their's was the pure, virgin bond of the heart ! 



148 THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 

"Omene, dearest/' spoke her love 
''Take from my lips these gifts above 
See those the false and fickle claim — 
My kisses ! Give me back the same !" 
Ah! beautiful she Hngered there 
Framed in her wealth of raven hair 
That in the moonlight shone as fair 

And glossy in its splendor 
As did those orbs of midnight hue 
That uttered, mutely, answers true 

To words of love so tender ! 
"Good-night, Omene, now we part 
But for awhile ; yet in my heart 
I keep thee as a flow'r that blooms 
Amid some far-off desert glooms, 
So sweet, so rare thou 'lit ever be, 
Dear Indian maiden, unto me!" 
They parted in the silver gleam 
Of moonlight ; each to fondly dream 
Of bliss that was for them in store: 
They parted — to meet nevermore ! 
In dreams, the maiden's raptured gaze, 
Soft-lighted by Love's ardent rays, 



THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 149 

Beheld the Future's radiance shine 
In rapture that was all divine! 
In dreams, she held her lover's hand 
Threading the groves of fairy-land ! 
The angels sang to soft repose 
Her heart, as breezes lull the rose 
Of twilght to its gentle sleep, 
So calm, so restful, and so deep! 



With stealthy stride from out the wood 
Who glides in wrathful solitude? 
The fierce gorilla nears the tent, 
Now straight he glides, now lowly bent, 
Glares 'round him with a cunning leer! 
Oh, maiden, quaileth not with fear 
Thy gentle heart, e'en in thy dreams, 
As onward fall the baleful gleams 
Of those fell eyes where lights of hell 
Blaze in their flames unquenchable? 
One scream of wild and lone despair 
Qeaves like a knife the torrid air! 
Then, in his arms, with mighty stride 



150 THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 

He bears the maiden far away 

While gleam the skies with tints of day, 

And fall the shrieks of wild dismay! 



On, on, like a torrent in turbulent might, 

The sons of the forest spur after in flight ! 

With heart all aflame rides the chief at their head, 

To rescue the maiden tho' living or dead ! 

Past tangle of vines, over river and hill, 

By valley and wood, over cascade and rill. 

In gorge and ravine, till the desert afar 

Shines on their gaze, like the gleam of a star ! 

By night and by day o'er the desert they speed, 

It bears not a leaf, no, not even a weed ! 

But yonder, afar on its ultimate verge. 

There blooms an oasis ! Still onward they urge 

Their fast failing steeds on the gorilla's track, 

No ardor they lose and no courage they lack; 

They care not for hunger, they heed not the thirst, 

For fierce the revenge that their maddened hearts nursed. 



THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 151 

Day follows day; thy journey on, 
Until their hope has well nigh gone! 
No food, no water anywhere, 
Nothing but one all-blinding glare 
Of sun! Steeds drop on every side 
Their forms bestrew the desert wide 
To gorge the buzzards of the air 
That hover o'er their pathway there? 
With sun-baked lips, the riders lie 
Beside their panting steeds to die. 
They talk of rivers gushing free, 
Of fountains in the desert sand; 
Of brooks that purl in melody; 
But Death lurks there on every hand ! 
Pale, quivering forms cry for pne drop 
Of water; but the rest ne'er stop — 
They follow where the chieftain leads 
Who little all the anguish heeds ! 
One thought is his in pain and death — 
To rescue her ere his last breath! 
They mark his tracks upon the sand — 
That monster's — ^and the lessening band 
Still staggers on! He looms in sight — 



152 THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 

Seems laughing at their hapless plight! 
The maiden in his arms he holds 
His mighty clutch her throat enfolds ! 



From crag to crag leaping, still upward he flies, 

The fierce fire of Hell in his terrible eyes. 

He laughs his pursuers to scorn as he bears 

His fair burden on to the dim mountain lairs 

Of the cougar and jaguar, o'er crevice and cleft, 

With the might of a giant of pity bereft ! 

Up, up, till he reaches the furthermost edge 

Of the precipice, piercing the clouds, like a wedge, 

Till clearly in view of the young chief he stands, 

And holds o'er the deep yawning gulf in his hands 

The maiden ! 

With horror and hopeless despair. 
The chief presses on, in his heart a wild prayer 
That the gods of his tribe will lend succor and aid, 
And safely restore to him yon helpless maid. 



THE LEGEND OF THE ARGENTINE. 153 

"Hold! Horrid monster! Curse thy hand!" 

He cries, while mockingly doth stand 

The creature of his vengeful hate! 

The arrow of the chief too late 

Wings from its leash ! Down caverns vast 

The maiden with a shriek is cast, 

Just as the fatal poisoned dart 

Is fleshed within the man-ape's heart! 



Years afterwards her grave they made 
Where the wild flowers gem the glade; 
And where the bright-winged birds flit by, 
Singing their songs to earth and sky. 
Beside her lies the chief whose love 
W as more to her than Heaven above ! 
Long, long, the tribe this legend told 
Of those dark, savage days of old — 
Of valor bright, of Love so true. 
As I have told it unto you. 



THE AIRSHIP. 155 



(A Twentieth Century Ditty.) 

How lightly thro' the air we whiz ! 

That's New York, just below : 
This keen wind cuts a fellow's phiz, 

ril close the window so. 
"Fares please!" Conductor, tell me when 

We come in sight of Mars, 
If I'm asleep, just wake me then; 

My ! what a lot of stars ! 
How smartly we are steered aside, 
I really thought we should collide. 

Thank goodness, I've a cozy seat, 

I can't hang on to straps ! 
How strange the faces that we meet 

Hindoos, Chinese and japs, 
French, German, Russian, all the rest 

Are congregated here ; 
This line's considered far the best. 

And fares are not so dear. 
No ! I don't stop at Timbuctoo, 
Conductor, I am going thro' ! 



156 THE AIRSHIP. 

That white streak over there, niv friend! 
Why, that's the Chilkoot Pass. 

You'll view it better at this end. 
Here, take my opera glass. 

And there's the Pole ! The Yankee flag- 
Is waving- o'er it, see ! 

As likewise over every crag 
In this vicinity ! 

What, Paris? I'll land there all right, 

I want to reach New^ York to-night! 



THE STRONGEST FORT. 157 

The strongest fort in the whole wide world ; 

Shall I tell you where it stands ? 
'Tis not where flags are proudly unfurled 

In this or in foreign lands. 

Nay, not where the walls are thick and high, 
Where the cannons are frowning down. 

Nor yet where the troops are standing by 
To defend their walled-up town. 

But down in your midst where battles rage — 

Rage on from the morn till night, 
It has stood the test from age to age. 

And never gave up the fight. 

No poet has ever sung in its praise, 

No hist'ry given it thought. 
Yet faithful it stood through all the days. 

And bravely the battles fought. 

Shall the riddle be read by some brave herald? 

Shall the curtains be drawn apart? 
Lo! the strongest fort in the whole wide world 

You'll find in a true woman's heart. 



58 YULE. 

Oh, heart of brave humanity, 
How art thou stirred to-day ! 

There is a sound of kindly glee 
That meets thee on the way. 

Thy pulses throb with happiness 

For, lo ! the star that shines to bless ! 
The Angels' choral symphonies 
Blend now with earthly harmonies, 
In heavenly rhyme 
At Christmas time! 

Back thro' the vista of the years, 
See yonder manger low, 

Beneath its wall the Babe appears 
With face of wond'rous glow ! 

The majesty of innocence 

That brings to earth a recompence 
For all the sorrow and the gloom, 
And bids sweet Hope again to bloom. 
With peace sublime 
At Christmas time ! 



YULE. 159 

Ring out to earth ye happy bells 

Above the mantling snow ! 
What joy each sound of yours compels 

While beam the high and low ! 
With peace on earth, and kindness still, 

Re-echo over vale and hill ! 

He comes, the Holy Babe of Peace 

With glory that shall never cease! 
Speed on, each chime, 
At Christmas time ! 

The world is crowned with heavenly light, 

In grasp of kindly hand ; 
In smiles of beauty die all spite 

And scorn throughout the land ! 
New life is wakening; and cheer 

Is throbbing in the heart so drear I 

The radiant Babe has tenderly 

Brought joy untold to you and me! 
Ring out, sweet chime, 
At Christmas time ! 



60 DECEMBER DAYS. 

A song for bleak December days, 
Tho' not a song is left, 
For birds have gone, 
And woods are lone. 
Of all their joys bereft. 
But what of that, if in the heart 
The Summer birds remain? 
We'll still be gay, 
And laugh away 
The bleak December's reign ! 

A shout for wild December days, 
Tho' falls the snow and sleet; 

Who heeds the storm, 

While hearts are warm, 
And smiles are bright and sweet? 
We've had the lovely Summer leaves, 
The sunshine and the dew ; 

We'll have them still, 

Old friend, we will — 
December days are few! 



DECEMBER DAYS. 161 

A cheer for dark December days 
For bring they not to all 

The brightest hour 

Of Heaven's dower 
That may to mortals fall? 
Oh, days of rare, old Yue-tide joy 
The sweetest of the year. 
That's why we sing 

Your welcoming 
December davs so dear! 



162 MIDWINTER. 

Zig-zag branches traced against 

A dreary ashen sky ; 
A filmy drapery of snow, 

And winds that hurry by. 
Oh, dark midwinter days, ye hang 

A pall on all around, 
But underneath the deepest snow 

The sweetest buds are found ! 

Icicles that, dagger-like, 

Hang from the farm-house eaves ; 
A monotone of weariness 

The howling tempest weaves. 
Oh, sad midwinter days, the heart, 
Like you, hath lack of cheer ; 
And yet, amid the leafless trees, 

The chirp of birds I hear ! 

Dales and hills that stretch afar, 
A wilderness of white ! 

The silent brook that gleams like steel. 
Once silvery delight. 



MIDWINTER. 163 

Oh, wild midwinter, haste away, 

On swift and darksome wing; 
Tho' hopeful hearts in thee can hail 

The prophesy of Spring! 



164 RETROSPECTION. 



They lie before me here, 

Indeed they look like toys — 
So small they seem — yet dead 

To me the many joys 
That in my heart revive 

At sight of these wee mates ; 
Once it seemed paradise 

To put on Nelly's skates! 

I see the same gay throng 

Swift gliding here and there; 
I hear the low-hummed song 

That fills the icy air; 
What was the world to me 

With all its loves and hates? 
When bending on my knees 

I put on Nelly's skates! 



RETROSPECTION. 165 

Ah, me ! 'Tis years ago ! 

And, Nelly, where is she? 
No wedded joys I know, 

Life seems a farce to me! 
The longer tho' I live 

The more love contemplates; 
What wouldn't I now give 

To put on Nelly's skates ! 



166 THE SEASONS. 



SPRING 

{In Colorado.) 

Robins in the tree-tops. 

Deeps of turquoise sky ; 
All the leaves a-waking — 

Laughing, low and high ! 
Crowds of snowy daisies 

Twinkling far and near ; 
Oh, the joy of daisy-time. 

Sweetest of the year! 

Silver rills that tinkle 

'Mid the grasses green ; 
Not a cloud that hovers 

Earth and sky between ; 
Crickets blithely chirping 

Welcome in with cheer — 
Daisy-time, sweet daisy-time, 

Fairest of the year! 



THE SEASONS. 167 

Far away the hill-tops 

In the purple mist 
Gleam a brilliant welcome — 

Gold and amethyst ; 
Thrills the world with gladness 

After sadness drear; 
Who could sigh in daisy-time, 

Brightest of the year? 



Colorado— 1904 



168 THE SEASONS. 

A SONNET 
{Midsummer in Santa Barbara.) 

A miser I would be to-day and hoard 

These treasures that I may not clasp again ; 

This flood of gold that drowns upland and plain, 

This billowy bloom that stretches deep and broad ; 

The river, dwindling far — a silver cord — 

And dappled shadows, down this cool, mossed lane 

Whose mirrored boughs the lucent brooklet stain 

With carven jet; these carols now outpoured — 

Melodious rain — among the listening leaves. 

Oh, benison of boundless, cloudless sky ! 

Mine, now, howe'er your sweets may glide away, 

Mine, to deHght the while white Winter grieves. 

To dream of when keen drifts go whirling by. 

Can aught to come steal joys I hoard to-day? 

Santa Barbara— 1904. 



THE SEASONS. 169 



OCTOBER 



Golden, brown and crimson leaves, 
Falling, falling everywhere; 

Ranks of amber tinted sheaves 
Nodding in the hazy air. 

And it's hey for blithe October, 
Tho' the skies are dull and sober, 

And the air is chill, 

Yet we love thee still, 
Oh, rare and blithe October! 
Here and there, in russet rain, 

Fall the chestnuts from the tree; 
"Bob White" softly calls again, 

Leaves are dancing in the breeze. 
There's a joy, tho' flow'rs have faded. 
And the sky and storm is shaded. 

For the dreamy days, 

Down these woodland ways. 
Are sweet in blithe October ! 



'fJ^TT-'T' 



1 70 THE SEASONS. 

Far off hills, in purple sheen, 

Glow, like lights from fairyland; 
Vales are clothed in golden green, 

Earth seems now a pageant grand ! 
Tho' the joyful Year is fleeting, 
And belated birds repeating 

Sad and long, "Good-bye," 
Where's the heart would sigh, 
In rare and blithe October? 

On the Santa Fe— 1904. 



THE SEASONS. 171 

MIDWINTER 
( Wyoming. ) 

A wind that moans o'er lifeless plains 

That wear a snowy shroud ; 
From leafless trees, when sunset wanes, 

No song-bird carols loud 
Its sweet Good-night; all Nature seems 

As hushed as Death, while far, 
Amid the dying daylight beams 

There shines no welcome star, 
In sad midwinter ! 

All silent where from branches high 

Keen icicles, like spears. 
Hang 'neath a bleak and ashen sky! 

And yet this thought still cheers : 
Oh, heart, amid the palling dearth, 

The overwhelming gloom. 
Beneath this snow-white shroud ot earth, 

Sweet roses bide their bloom 
Thro' lone midwinter! 



Wyoming — 1904. 



172 THE STEAMBOAT. 

How I love to watch the steamboat, 

As it skims the silv'ry lake, 
In the glorious golden sunshine 

When the morn is just awake ; 
And the smoke its sable ringlets 

Wave around its handsome back, 
While it speeds along the wat'ry ground 

It leaves a silv'ry track. 

The men who ride this matchless steed, 

That plows the raging deep, 
Are lost in wonder, love and fear. 

As along the waves they sweep. 
They watch the golden flowers above 

That bloom in the fields of blue. 
And dream of the loving ones at home 

With loving thoughts most true. 

O! the music of its whistle! 

Its throat so sharp and shrill! 
As it echoes o'er the bounding waves 

It makes my heart just thrill ! 
For I love this steed of matchless speed. 

This steed of the waters blue. 
That dashes along the hilly ground 

With feet that are most true. 



GOOD-BYE. SWEETHEART. 1 73 

Good-by, sweetheart, 

For we must part ; 
Those bitter words are filled with pain. 

I did not dream, 

That life would seem 
So cold to me, and all in vain. 

My days were bright, 

No gloomy night 

Until he came, 

His bride to claim; 

The happy past 

Aside is cast, 
For I must say good-by, sweetheart. 

One parting kiss 

I beg for this ! 
And though I go, I love you yet. 

This last good-by 

Brings forth a sigh. 
And my poor heart throbs with regret. 



74 GOOD-BYE. SWEETHEART. 

Think once again 
What might have been, 
Had fate been kind 
And love not blind, 
And that will be 
Enough for me — 
I'll ask no more — good-by, sweetheart. 



EASTER-TIDE. 1 75 

Oh, bells that ring out joyfully, 

Awake the hills and vales 
To glories that our eyes may see, 

Bring fragrance to the gales 
Ring out all sadness from the heart, 

Bid mirth with us abide, 
And cause the gloomy shades depart, 

Oh, bells of Easter-tide. 

Oh, skies of blue, ye seem to lean 

More near to waking dells. 
And fields and mountains, glad each scene 

With rapture, Easter bells 
Ah, lonely hearts await your call. 

The message, far and wide. 
Bear jubilantly unto all 

That wait, fair Easter- Tide. 

Join rills in glorious refrain, 

Sing birds on merry wing; 
Oh, trouble of the silver rain. 

What gladness do ye bring. 



176 EASTER-TIDE. 

The emeralds of springing leaves 

The winters' ruin hide; 
God's love to every soul that grieves, 

Oh, speak, sweet Easter-Tide. 



I MISS THEE. 177 



I miss thee when the morn awakes, 
And all the birds sing out thy name, 
I miss thee by the rippling brook, 
Where first I sought thy love to claim ; 
I miss the music of thy voice, 
That spoke to me of love divine, 
And feel as if my heart would break, 
For I can never call thee mine. 

I miss thee where we walked so gay, 
Beneath the cloudless summer sky. 
And told our loves so dear and true, 
Before we parted — thou and I ; 
I miss thee when the twilight falls, 
'Tis then I long to have thee near, 
I know no life without thy love, 
'Twas bliss alone when thou wert here. 



1 78 IN WINTER. 



In the sleigh together, 

He and she; 
Lovely wintry weather, 

Happy he. 
Round her waist, so cosy, 

One arm free ; 
Cheeks are blushing rosy 
As can be! 

This, while jogging slowly 

On their way, 
Thro' the valley lowly. 

Light and gay. 
Soon the air is tingling 

Fast they speed ; 
Reins, while bells are jingling, 

Both hands need! 



IN WINTER. 179 

Little maid demurely, 

Simply sighs, 
Muffled up securely; 

Witching eyes. 
Speeding down the high hill, 

Speech she gains : 
"Dearest, rest, and I will 

Hold the reins!" 



!«0V 22 5912 



Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. 
Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide 
Treatment Date: Oct. 2009 

PreservationTechnologies 

A WORLD LEADER IN COLLECTIONS PRESERVATION 

111 Thomson Park Dnve 
Cranberry Township, PA 1 6066 
(724)779-2111 



